"In what way is a midsummer night s dream a shakespearean comedy" Essays and Research Papers

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    A Midsummer Nights Dream‚ by William Shakespeare is a play about love‚ fantasy‚ and magic. In a passage in Act I scene i‚ Hermia has just refused to marry Demetrius‚ going against her fathers demands. This enrages her father‚ so her father brings her to Theseus‚ where the passage begins with Theseus telling Hermia that she must marry Demetrius or become a nun. In this passage‚ Shakespeare conveys the idea that people are often inconsiderate when reacting to others misfortunes. Shakespeare shows

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    In reading‚ "Romeo and Juliet‚" and‚ "A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚" we can find a number of similarities in the characters of both plays. The distinct differences in them are that in one‚ we have a humorous character (or characters) with a cheery ending and in the other; we have a tragic character/s with a moral flaw that will aid in his or her downfall. In an evaluation of their distinctions we can see how they both hold true to their intent on carrying the story forward on it’s meandering course

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    Comparing ’A midsummer night dream "- the play and film adaptation I have seen both the modernized version of the play and the film version of Shakespeare’s play‚ "A midsummer night dream." In this text I will compare these two versions and write a short summary of the play‚ write about how the play different from the movie and what the differences are. I will then conclude with my own opinion about the piece. There are two interesting versions with many different features‚ but they are incredibly

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    create humor in drama‚ one must either make witty wordplay‚ create an amusing situation‚ or use physical comedy. Often jokes may be incorporated into a play‚ or a comic situation may result in a series of complicated antics. The tradition for some of these comic devices has been carried over for hundreds of years‚ dating back to Shakespeare in the 1600’s. In his play‚ A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ Shakespeare creates humor through three diverse devices: oxymoron’s‚ malapropisms and mistaken identities

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    did not wish to be with him and because she thought he was mocking her. Puck tried to fix the mess and did make Demetrius love Helena‚ but now both the men love Helena and she thinks they are all mocking her. Then Helena found then and had no idea what was going on and the group was soon spotted by Oberon and the matter was quickly fixed by some Antidotes and they became two happy couples. Just yesterday Lysander married Hermia and Demetrius married Helena. Meanwhile‚ while Titania was with

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    started talking about Shakespearean comedy‚ many of us would start yawning within the first five minutes. (name)‚ I saw that yawn. Hang in there class‚ don’t you dare close those eyes at me. Hmm‚ have you ever wondered why that is? I mean‚ 400 years ago‚ people would be literally racing to watch his plays. And FYI‚ Shakespeare’s comedy uses conventions and devices to entertain audiences by communicating through language and acting. On the other side of history‚ modern comedy is a dynamic art that

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    Austin Green-Paxton TDA-English 4A 6/10/13 A Midsummer Night’s Dream A and B) THESEUS‚ Duke of Athens: Engaged to Hippolyta. Theseus represents power and order throughout the course of the play. He appears only at the beginning and end of the story‚ and seems to be removed from the dreamlike events of the forest. EGEUS‚ Father to Hermia: Egeus has given Demetrius permission to marry Hermia‚ but Hermia‚ who’s in love with Lysander‚ refuses to marry Demetrius. Egeus’s insists that

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    The complex‚ tangled webs of lovers in William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream is partly to blame for the “love-in-idleness.” (Act 2‚ Scene 1‚ Line 173) This flower‚ “before‚ milk-white‚ now purple with loves wound‚” (Act 2‚ Scene 1‚ Line 174)‚ has the power to make the person treated with its juice‚ across their eyelids‚ fall in love with the first person they see. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream‚ Shakespeare teases the audience with this magic flower‚ almost dangling it in front of their faces

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    ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ is Shakespeare’s most popular comedy‚ written in 1590. It portrays the adventure of four young Athenian lovers and a group of trades people‚ their interactions with the Duke of Athens‚ and Queen of the Amazons Theseus and Hippolyta‚ who are soon to be married and with fairies who inhabit the Athenian forest. Michael Hoffman’s 1999 reenactment of William Shakespeare’s classic tale ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ effectively and humorously depicts the collision between the

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    scene in ‘A Midsummer Night’s dream’ is only a comical interlude and nothing more as it does not relate to the main story directly. However‚ I would argue against this and say that the last scene is written by Shakespeare as a clever way of showing the audience what might have happened to the lovers. Also‚ a common convention of comedies is mockery‚ so the craftsmen’s play could be interpreted as a way of mocking the foolish behaviour of the four lovers. Another classic convention of comedy is forbidden

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