"Julius caesar to what extent has textual form shaped your understanding of conflicting perspectives" Essays and Research Papers

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    and just to me‚ Brutus says he was ambitious And Brutus is an honourable man. Julius Caesar is more concerned with ambition then honour. To what extent do you agree? I agree that Julius Caesar is more concerned with ambition then honour but only to a small extent. Even though Julius Caesar was an ambitious man‚ he was also honourable as he was a man who stuck to his words and loved the Roman populace. Caesar was an ambitious man and it was his ambition that led to his downfall. In the play

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    ’All representations are acts of manipulation.’ To what extent does your study of conflicting perspectives support this statement? Manipulation is present in any representation‚ as a result of an authors inherent bias towards their own perspective. This bias causes an author to attempt to influence the perspective a reader will take on the text‚ whether this influence is intentional or otherwise. Geoffrey Robertson is one such author‚ whos collection of essays titled The Justice Game contains

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    Julius Caesar

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    the middle of the day -Casca was telling this to Caesar 4. lion gave birth 5. graves opened 6. it is stormy 7. blood drizzled from the capital 8.horses neighed and dead men groaned 9. ghost shrieked 10. Romans bathed their hands in his blood smiling - Calphurnia’s dream Forshadow Calphurnia’s dream was a portent she dreamed it three times Irony[aside] Audience knows that Trebonius is apart of the conspiracy and that shows that Caesar will die Fates When the expiration date is up 3

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    Julius Caesar

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    individuals tried to warn Caesar. List three of them and explain Shakespeare’s purpose in the warnings. •The soothsayer warns Caesar to "Beware the Ides of March!" Caesar calls him a fool. Calpurnia warns Caesar about a dream she had. Willing at first to heed the warning‚ Caesar scorns her for making him look like a coward. Artemidorus writes Caesar a letter‚ which Caesar refuses to read before he gets to the Capitol. •Shakespeare shows the reader‚ through these warnings‚ that Caesar thinks highly of

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    others’ eyes. In William Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar‚ two main characters‚ Julius Caesar and Marcus Brutus‚ present different personas- one being each characters actual self-characterizations‚ which we learn through their discussions with others‚ and another is how they are actually perceived in the eyes of others. Their inability to project their true motives in performing certain actions eventually brings about their tragic downfalls. Julius Caesar believed that people needed one strong ruler

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    Julius Caesar

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    world. Brutus is a very cautious man. "Into what dangers are you leading me‚ Cassius‚ that you would have me lookinto myself for things that are not there?"(1.2.68-70) This quote is referring to act 1 where Cassius brings Brutus into the room and starts to talk about Caesar. When Cassius suggests to kill Mark Antony alone with Caesar‚ Brutus says‚ "Our plan will seem too bloody‚ Caius Cassius. We cut off the head and then hack the limbs‚ seem to kill Caesar in anger and then vent malice on his friends

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    Is Julius Caesar a tyrant?

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    Does Shakespeare depict Julius Caesar as a tyrant who deserved to be deposed because of his unconstitutional usurpation of power?  William Shakespeare’s well-renowned play‚ The Tragedy of Julius Caesarhas led to centuries of controversial debate on the validity of tyrannicide based on his depiction of Julius Caesar. Some scholars have argued that Shakespeare intended to portray Caesar as a tyrant‚ while others believe he is acting as a just King. On one hand‚ it is difficult to assume that

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    Composers represent conflicting perspectives through their own unique experiences and values as their political and social contexts. Geoffrey Robertson’s self styled memoir ’The Justice Game’ written in the late 1900’s heavily reflects these conflicting perspectives in the ’Trials of Oz’ and ’The Romans in Britain’ through the employment of emotive and persuasive language and ridicule in the form of satire to which convey Robertson’s view through his eyes. Such conflicts also portrayed in Charles

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    Textual Form and Features

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    Textual features: language features Alliteration when the poet uses the same consonant letter at the beginning of a number of words placed close together e.g. dark plastic skeleton dangling near my French doors. Apostrophe addressing an inanimate object or a dead person as if they were alive e.g. ‘Death be not proud though some have called thee mighty’(Donne‚ J in Favourite verse (1999) Hurford‚ C (Ed)‚ Parragon‚ Bath. p.450) Assonance when the poet repeats the same vowel sound in a number of words

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    In Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar‚ Cicero states “Men may construe things after their fashion‚” (Act I Scene iii‚ Page 37‚ Lines 34–35) Often‚ misperception and misreading can drastically affect the outcome of people in their lives. Misperception and misreading not only affects the characters in Julius Caesar‚ it also affects everybody’s decisions in their day-to-day lives. In much of Shakespeare’s tragedy‚ the reader witnesses the idea of misperception and misreading of omens and events as they occur

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