Claudio By Edward and Tarun.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare Act II, scenes i-iii.
Advertisements

Much Ado About Nothing By William Shakespeare. Much Ado About Nothing  Was written by William Shakespeare sometime between  It is a comedy.
Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare Act I, scenes i-iii.
Ms. Gillian Blackiston Shakespeare Class 11 th -12 th grade Go to next slide Characters of.
Much Ado About Nothing By Maylin Guida, Naseem Ghasemiyeh, Trevor Torres, Maura White, and Chelsea Anguiano.
Much Ado About Nothing William Shakespeare (1598)
An analysis of the character from ‘Much Ado About Nothing.’
Noting. “By noting the lady, I have marked a thousand blushing apparitions”
Don John Quotes By Sami & Aman. “Food to my displeasure”
CLAUDIO.  “Can the world buy such a jewel?”  The word “buy” has connotations of objects which suggest Claudio simply views Hero as an object but the.
PLOT Act 1 Don Pedro, returns triumphant from battle and seeks refuge in Messina. Leonato, welcomes Pedro and his soldiers with open arms, and the sudden.
Cinderella: A Turn in Love
Much Ado About Nothing William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing. Dramatis Personae Don Pedro, Prince of Arragon Don John, his bastard brother Claudio, young lord of Florence Benedick,
Much Ado About Nothing Session 3. Learning Goals To explore how Shakespeare establishes character and setting in Act One Scene One To identify how Shakespeare.
Much Ado about Nothing William Shakespeare By Junwoo Ha.
Mohammed and Alan. Beatrice: “She is wronged, she is slandered, she is undone.” Act 4 Scene 1 The quote emphasises her strong opinions. This is unusual.
M UCH A DO ABOUT NOTHING Themes. P ITFALLS & IMPEDIMENTS The road to marriage is often lined with pitfalls and impediments. Benedick and Beatrice are.
Much Ado About Nothing A Brief Overview.
Much Ado About Nothing Quotations Act I “ Can the world buy such a jewel?” (1.1) “ Can the world buy such a jewel?” (1.1) –Claudio He wears his faith.
20/05/2015. This compares Hero to a very precious yet also expensive artefact This also goes along with the stereotypes that in those days women were.
By William Shakespeare
Messina… where we set our scene
Lesson 2 Richard III. The language of critical analysis: What words have you used in your homework that are specific to analysing literature? effective.
Introduction to Shakespeare: Some of his Most Important Works.
Short Response Practice. BENEDICK What’s going on these days? Isn’t there one man left in the world who knows not to take a wife? She’s just going to.
Boys or Girls being jealous of someone taking who they fancy. Don John being jealous that Hero likes Claudio and Claudio likes Hero.
MAAN Cue Cards Beatrice. “Signor Montanto” Beatrice 1:1.
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Characters EventsMisc.Misc. Cont.
Benedick. “…it is certain that I am loved by all ladies.”
PEARLING for success: Approaching Analysis in year 10 Monday, 15 February 2016 Jonathan Peel JLS 2015.
{ Much Ado About Nothing A Brief Overview.  Born in 1564  Married Anne Hathaway 1582, had 3 children  1590, left his family behind to travel to London.
November 26 th and 27 th 5 th Class of the New Quarter  Attendance  Get new words for the weeks vocabulary  Discuss the first two acts of Much Ado in.
William Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing. Dramatis Personae Don Pedro, Prince of Arragon Don John, his bastard brother Claudio, young lord of Florence.
Today: get out choice novel! Read the whole time; prepare for book talk; complete a one-pager I expect you to stay awake and work. Those that have missed.
GENDER ROLES Much Ado About Nothing. THE ELIZABETHAN ERA 15th and 16th Centuries valued Patriarchal Societies Women were raised to believe they were inferior.
The Crucible 2007 Question 3: Choose a play in which a character makes a crucial error. Explain what the error is and discuss to what extent this is important.
Courtly Love. Claudio- Quotation Claudio- “In mine eye she is the sweetest lady that ever I looked on.”
Much Ado About Nothing A comedy by William Shakespeare.
Much Ado About Nothing Notes
Much Ado About Nothing William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare BIO Other Facts About Shakespeare “Much Ado About Nothing”
Short Response Practice
Hero By Anil and Thivyan.
Macbeth Learning Objective
Poetry Anthology – Revision Session 3
Aspects of Love, and why it isn’t called “Beatrice and Benedick”
Lead-ins and In-text Citations
Agenda *Discuss Dying Lines/Death Scene
How does Shakespeare present the marriage of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth?
I.G.c.S.E. literature revision
The new globe.
GCSE English Literature Unit 1 Modern Texts
MAAN CUE CARDS – DON PEDRO
Bell work: Much Ado About Nothing
Much Ado About Nothing Summary
Much Ado about Nothing.
The MOdern globe.
What do I need to know about essay test
How many words are in the script? What is the setting of the play?
Much Ado about Nothing Readers’ Theater.
It’s actually something.
Rhetorical Devices – How to Analyse
Much Ado About Nothing PLAY MAP DOGBERRY DON PEDRO (P RINCE OF
Title - How should I analyse thee?
Shooting Stars Analysing Quotes
Presentation transcript:

Claudio By Edward and Tarun

“I find here that Don Pedro hath bestowed much honour on a young Florentine called Claudio” Messenger

Who: Messenger When: Act 1 Scene 1 Where: Town Claudio is highly respected by Leonato and the messenger because of his contribution in the civil war and his partnership with Don Pedro, Prince of Aragon.

“..doing in the figure of a lamb, the feats of a lion.” Messenger

Who: Messenger When: Act 1 Scene 1 Where: Town The metaphor used shows us how young and vulnerable Claudio still is. He may be a “lion” on the battlefield, but he is still a “lamb”. While he has experience in battle, he has no experience yet with love, which is shown with his immature behaviour towards Hero.

“Can the world buy such a jewel?” Claudio

Who: Claudio When: Act 1 Scene 1 Where: Town The metaphor used “jewel” emphasises Claudio’s love for Hero with the use of such a precious object. The word “buy” also tells us that women are regarded as property and that men own them, which links with the theme of the ‘status of women’ in the play.

“I will shame her.” Claudio

Who: Claudio When : Act 3 Scene 2 The short, sharp sentences shows Claudio’s decisiveness, but also his careless ability to change his mind before thinking about what was actually said. The word “shame” suggests that Claudio doesn’t just want to break with Hero, he wants to publicly humiliate her, which shows a heartless side to Claudio that we haven’t seen so far.

“Sweet Prince… There Leonato, take her back” Claudio

Who: Claudio When: Act 4 Scene 1 Where: Wedding With the use of a contrast in language and tone, Shakespeare highlights Claudio's fury and urge to make sure Hero is humiliated. This is shown by “Sweet Prince” which Claudio uses, referring to Don Pedro, but then refers to Leonato by his name, which suggests he is rude and disrespectful to his almost father in-law.

“Give not this rotten orange to your friend” Claudio

Who: Claudio When: Act 4 Scene 1 Where: Wedding By referring to Hero as a piece of rotten fruit, Claudio implies that what was once sweet and pure, is now spoiled and nasty. (Just as Eve was tempted in the Garden Of Eden by fruit that turned out to be evil, Claudio was first attracted and then repulsed by the "impure" Hero.)

“ She knows the heat of a luxurious bed” Claudio

Who: Claudio When: Act 4 Scene 1 Where: Wedding This quote, at the wedding scene, furtherly emphasises Claudio’s bitter and uncaring personality, especially because of the fact that he is mistaken, and Hero is innocent.

“I have drunk poison while he uttered it” Claudio

Who: Claudio When: Act 5 Scene 1 Where: When Dogberry reveals Hero’s innocence Claudio ‘drank poison’ which suggests that Claudio wasn’t thinking straight when he was tricked. This can be interpreted as a confession from Claudio, showing his more modest side.

“I am your husband, if you like of me” Claudio

Who: Claudio When: Act 5 Scene 4 Where: Hero’s ‘funeral’ After Claudio has realised he is mistaken, his character changes to a more modest one. Compared to Claudio’s quotation in Act 1 Scene 1 , “Can the world buy such a jewel?” , Claudio has now asked Hero for her opinion, and allowed her to make her own choice, which shows us Claudio is becoming more forgiving and accepting that he had made a mistake.

“A halting sonnet of his own pure brain, fashion’d to Beatrice” Claudio

Who: Claudio When: Act 5 Scene 4 Where: After Hero accepts Claudio’s apology, and the couple are back in a relationship, we see that Claudio’s character changes into one that we saw towards the beginning of the play, an amusing and cheerful character, when he talks to Benedick about his relationship with Beatrice.