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Published byBenedict Baker Modified over 9 years ago
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“To be or not to be….” “To thine own self be true….”
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Tragedy Greek Tragedy: _____ _________meets destruction because of _____. Defined by _________as “the ________of an action that is serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in itself.” Shakespearean Tragedy: Noble character meets destruction because of a certain _________ ______(_____ ______)
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Tragic Flaw A _______in the hero’s character that brings about his ________(often a _______characteristic turned against the hero). In Julius Caesar it was Brutus’s sense of ________. In Romeo and Juliet their flaw was their impulsive ________. In Lord of the Flies, it’s Ralph’s desire for ___________. (Even though he doesn’t die.)
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Tragic Hero Usually a figure of _________within society Suffers a change in fortune from __________to _________ Audience is moved both to ________because we recognize his misfortune is _________than he deserves and to _________generated by our recognition of _________flaws in our own fallible selves.
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Fun Pun
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Elizabethan Age (Hint: Elizabeth I was queen. ) Also considered ____ __________(the “_______” of interest in all areas of _____________) ____________? What’s that? The birth of modern __________ Believed __________was the center of the __________
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Within that well-ordered universe… Religious rules _________Right of Kings God given right to be king King was God’s ____________on Earth Elizabethan’s believed in a _________order to their universe (i.e. God assigned everything and everyone a place.)
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Elizabethan Hierarchy God ________ Humans* King __________ Knights Merchant _____________ Serfs Beasts, _________, Fish, and ________
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“The play’s the thing …”(Bust out the blue packet.) Blank verse Rhyming couplets Stage directions Prose Aside Foil Soliloquy Monologue Motif*
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Motifs in Hamlet ___________ Mortality Appearance and __________ ___________ Doubt/Indecisiveness
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Speaking of Shakespeare…
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