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In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.
Page 2: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being:

Characters

God

Royalty

Nobles

Army Ruling class

Lower Class

Middle Class

Duncan, King of Scotland Malcolm and Donalbain, his two sons

Macduff and his wife, Lennox, Ross, Meneth, Angus, Cathness, all Scottish noblemen

Two generals: Banquo (and his son Fleance,) Macbeth (and his wife), generals of the English forces, Earl of Northumberland (and hi s son Young Siward)

Page 3: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

• SOURCE: Holinshed’s Chronicles Of England

• Maybe a homage to James I, king of Scotland, England and Ireland, so interested in witchcraft. • The shortest of Shakespeare’s tragedies, and one of his shortest plays.

• Complex psychological analysis of what takes place in the mind of the criminal.

• No sub- plot, the play is centred on Macbeth: Shakespeare uses lesser characters to comment on the central action,

to give a wider context to Macbeth’s behaviour.

• No villain pitted against the hero. • Macbeth begins as a brave warrior but, led by ambition, he chooses evil and becomes a murderous tyrant Parable of the tragic hero.

Page 4: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

Introduction

Rising action

Climax

Falling action

Conclusion

Symmetrical development

Dramatic structure

Page 5: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

RISING ACTION: Macbeth meets the three witches: their prophecy begins to work on his ambition. He kills Duncan.

INTRODUCTION: The first two scenes: the appearance of the three witches and the news of Macbeth’s bravery in battle.

CLIMAX: Banquo’s murder (Act III, Scene 3)

FALLING ACTION: Fleance’s escape the banquet scene arousing of Macduff Macbeth retreats to Dunsinane Castle

CONCLUSION: Final fall and death of Lady Macbeth and Macbeth

Page 6: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

THEMES:

Good and EvilAppearances often hide realityThe overthrow of the natural orderReversal of values: ‘Fair is foul, and foul is fair’. (the Three Witches)

Loyalty and honourPolitical ambition and greed for powerViolation of order that lead to chaos: Regicide, as an act against Nature, brings chaos.

Equivocation and false appearance: chain of metaphors connected with clothingFuture time: cluster of imagery concerned with growth: babies, seeds, plants, trees.

Page 7: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

Features of a tragic hero

Even a good man, and the early reports suggest Macbeth had fine qualities, ‘valiant, noble, brave’, is vulnerable to the seductive and destructive possibilities of POWER Struggle between the individual and the recurrent forces of demonic possession Nobility of birth or wisdom. A flaw, either a mistake in the character’s actions or in his personality that leads to a downfall. A reversal of fortune caused by his flaw. The realisation that the reversal was brought about by the hero’s own actions. The audience has to feel pity and fear (catharsis) for the character.

Page 8: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

• Use of BLANK VERSE, which is basically unrhymed iambic pentameter: ‘Macbéth does múrther Sleép, - the ínnocent Sleép; Sleép, that kníts up the rávell’d sléave of cáre’ (Act II, Scene 2)

• If one character ends his speech without finishing his line verse, the following speaker completes that line.

Macbeth: “Your chíldren sháll be kíngs” Banquo: “You sháll be kíng.” (Act I, Scene 3)

• Inclusion, within the verbal structure of verse, of metrical space for other, non-verbal signs

Style

Page 9: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.

Imagery• The idea of contrast is fundamental in Macbeth:

ORDER opposed by DISORDER

HEALTH opposed by SICKNESS

LIGHT opposed by DARKNESS

GRACE opposed by EVIL

• similes ‘As two spent swimmers, that do cling together  And choke their art.’ (Act I, Scene 2)   ‘As thick as hail came post with post.’ (Act I, Scene 3)

• metaphors ‘Life’s but a walking shadow’ (Act V, Scene 5) ‘They have tied me to a stake.’ (Act V, Scene 7)  

• symbols ‘the innocent Sleep’ - ‘A little water clears us of this deed’ (Act II, Scene 2)

Page 10: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.
Page 11: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.
Page 12: In the Middle Ages people believed in the great Chain of Being: Characters God Royalty Nobles Army Ruling class Lower Class Middle Class Duncan, King.