Wednesday, October 12, 2011

How Does Shakespeare Portray The Nature


How does Shakespeare portray the nature
of love in "A Midsummer Nights Dream"?‘A Mid-summer Nights Dream' is evidentially concerned with the series of hindrances in the course of true love.   Shakespeare reverses the categories of reality and illusion, portraying to the audience with a comic edge that when overcome with the illusion of love couples become blind to the misfortunes that are bound to cross their path.

The most basic part of Shakespeare's plays is the relationship between men and women. In a society so closely woven with Christianity, it seemed natural to take the mandate for this relationship from the bible. This names the husband the head of the household; he can govern his family as he pleases. Despite the pervading view in Elizabethan England of women as the property of their fathers.   Shakespeare's form does not take a firm stance on how he thinks marriage should work. Marriage was considered as a way to establish order most of Shakespeare's plays have to do with the making or breaking of family ties.

The Characters are drawn from three different worlds: the Athenian Gentry, the Craftsmen of Athens, and the Fairy World. The protagonist is the bizarre nature of love, as represented by four couples: Hermia and Lysander, Helena and Demetrius, Titania and Oberon, and Hippolyta and Theseus. The whole play centers on the central idea of lovers, ironically and comically coming together and being free to marry.

The opening exposition is first set in Medieval Athens; Shakespeare uses familiar figures from Greek mythology, which would be seen as autocratic and mature mirroring the future portrayal of their love. Theseus as the male is dominant over Hippolyta; her submission brings forth the imminent wedding. Because they meet in an adverse environment it creates dramatic and passionate tension, which is later resolved. This is in stark contrasts with the young lovers, who are erratic and indecisive.

‘Hippolyta, I wooed thee with my sword;
And...

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