The role of Women In Hamlet
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The play Hamlet, by William Shakespeare, was written in the early 17th century, during the Elizabethan era. In this time period, women were expected to marry at a young age and have children to carry on the family name; this was to be their only role in life. Women were not believed to be rational and intelligent human beings. For centuries, women have been imprisoned within this box, constricted and restrained by the male view of what women's role in life is. They are mothers, daughters, girlfriends, and wives but never philosophers, business people, investors, owners, doctors or lawyers; they...
love/ Over the nasty sty!" III.iv.ll 102-105. Women are subject to whatever faults men place on them instead of themselves.
love/ Over the nasty sty!" III.iv.ll 102-105. Women are subject to whatever faults men place on them instead of themselves.
Within the play Hamlet, the role of women is very negative; they are sexual objects, weak, and not independent. Shakespeare has used a model of the women of his time and put them into this play, Hamlet. Though time has passed and views have changed on women, Hamlet remains the same, stuck in the 17th century. The role of women in Hamlet remains very minimal and only serves to further enhance and characterize the male characters within the play.
William Shakespeare, the world's most famous playwright, Romeo and Juliet, the greatest love story ever told. For over four hundred years this play has been performed for audiences of all ages. Containing famous lines such as; "Romeo, Romeo wherefore art thou Romeo" And "A plague on both your...
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On the 27th of June, we travelled down to the Phoenix Theatre in London, the play we saw is called Blood Brothers and is written by Willy Russell. The play is set in Liverpool and was written in the 1980's. The 1980's was known as Thatchers Britain. It...
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The set for Henceforward is a crucial part of the play. Especially for act one. The type of stage that I would choose to perform the play on, would be a Thrust Stage. This is because , I think that it has the right shape for the set, props, and...
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For my GCSE practical, we chose to create a piece of improvisation in which I was a performer. I had previously been a stage manager and so it was interesting to be in a position to see a play from a completely different perspective, as an actor. Our devised...
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William Shakespeare creates a lot of tension for the audience in Romeo and Juliet during act one scene five, where we see Romeo and Juliet fall deeply in love. The audience know that they are both from feuding families- the Capulets and Montagues before Romeo and Juliet themselves...
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