"Bodega dreams" Essays and Research Papers

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    A play within a play‚ a comedy of love: A Midsummer night’s dream Shakespeare was pointing out that love is maddening and that people do very eccentric things for love. In the play A Midsummer night’s dream written by Shakespeare‚ the characters portray the quote written by John Lennon‚ ‘All you need is love’ in multiple ways. To some extent the quote is relatable and to some extent it is not. In the play‚ there is tension between love and law‚ thus‚ four lovers escape into the magic forest

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    In the play A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ a quote said by Bottom states that‚ “to say the truth‚ reason and love keep little company together nowadays.” I believe that is is a very important part of the theme of the entire play and can be tied in with the contrast between the Athenian court and the wilderness. The Athenian court in the play is what can be compared to logic and reason. It is to be taken very seriously which is shown in the play in Act 1 when Hermia is given the choices of marrying

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    In the time of A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ Queen Elizabeth was the authority that ruled England. She became a very important figure to the 16th Century. Tensions arose out of her control of both State and Church. Jennifer Clements’ describes the tension‚ as “anxiety about female dominance and male inadequacy‚” (Clement). Titania‚ the fairy queen‚ holds the power over the fairies and the natural world‚ while Oberon holds a power similar to that of Theseus‚ a power that resides in the power of status

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    The course of true love is not only unsmooth‚ it is also irrational‚ whimsical‚ and unpredictable. This truth written by William Shakespeare is on ample display in one of his most popular romantic comedies‚ A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Theseus formulates the correlation that exists between the insanity often expressed in the actions of desire and the words of a poet during his speech near the end of the play when he observes that "The lunatic‚ the lover‚ and the poet / Are of imagination all compact"

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    Mid Summer Nights Dream

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    validity as my handwritten signature.   Student’s signature (name typed here is equivalent to a signature):  ___Ahmad Frank Safieh ________________________ ___ Option #1 Battle of the Sexes In Shakespeare’s play titled A Midsummer Nights Dream‚ there are a few underlying themes throughout the play. The one I will be focusing on is the battle of the sexes that occurs in the play between the couples in the fairy world‚ and in the “real world.” We see unusual styles of courting women‚ and paradoxical

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    The story of Pyramus and Thisbe offers a very subtle return to a couple of the main elements of A Midsummer Night’s Dream: lovers caught up in misunderstanding and sorrow enhanced by the darkness of night. Like the main story of the outer play‚ the inner play consists of a tragic premise made comical by the actors. The craftsmen’s unintentionally goofy portrayal of the woe of Pyramus and Thisbe makes the melodramatic romantic entanglements of the young Athenian lovers seem even more comical. However

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    In A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ Shakespeare portrays the plays female characters in two different lights. While late 16th century English women were expected to become wives and mothers‚ A Midsummer Night’s Dream does not adhere to the set gender roles of the time. This can be seen through the character of Hermia who is a daring and strong willed female that transcends established norms. On the other‚ the character Helena represents desperate and submissive females‚ which were more commonplace than

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    in a nut shell with the character Puck saying "Oh what fools these mortals be". The jealousy between two friends over a man‚ to men fighting over the heart of one woman and a controlling father. "Oh what fools these mortals be!" A midsummer night’s dream illustrates this by displaying the havoc caused by puck then the human’s own foolishness. When two bestfriends; Helena and Hermia‚ are captured in a sever love triangle‚ one is bound to be hurt. The story goes Hermia loves Lysander‚ Demitrus loves

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    Love in A Midsummer Night’s Dream “The course of true love never did run smooth.” (Act 1‚ scene 1) In the play‚ A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ by William Shakespeare‚ there are several situations which true love has gone astray. Hermia and her true love cannot be wed because of the law of the city. Helena loves Demetrius‚ but he does not love her back. The ghastliest situation of love is between Bottom and Titania. They are in love for numerous awry reasons. The law of Athens states that women cannot

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    A Midsummer Night’s Dream Study Questions ACT I‚ SCENE I - Due Date ____________________ 1. How is Hippolyta’s reasoning concerning how quickly the next four days will pass different from that of Theseus? 2. Why has Egeus brought his daughter and her two suitors to Theseus? What does Egeus expect him to do? 3. What was the proper role for women/daughters in Athenian society according to Egeus and Theseus? 4. What is Theseus’s ruling concerning Hermia? 5. How does Lysander’s comment about Demetrius’s

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