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    women. Because it produces jealousy‚ and transforms to poison‚ this drives them crazy and violent. Goneril and Regan fight for Edmund‚ which lead them to death‚ and forget about traditional gender roles. They are the most power of the kingdom‚ but Lear now becomes their servant. It is shameful‚ whether as a male in a male – dominated society‚ or as a father‚ the patriarchy ( the historical central problem) is challenged by women. When he faced with challenges from women’ rebellion‚ and the inability

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    Fool in King Lear The Fool is Lear’s own stand-up comedian‚ but he’s the only guy that Lear allows to criticize him. But in Shakespeare’s plays‚ he seems to be very intelligent and also a good person. Fool assumes to be Lear’s protector. The Fool is the King’s advocate‚ loyal and honest‚ but he is also able to point out the king’s faults‚ as no one else can. The Fool shares his master’s fate‚ and this reinforces the impression that the Fool’s purpose is to protect Lear until Cordelia can arrive

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    15 January 2011 True Love in King Lear The researcher will try to expose that feelings are not shown with words but with actions. No one can deny that true love between a father and a daughter is something really wonderful. In King Lear‚ the King ’s youngest daughter‚ Cordelia‚ gives us the real meaning of love from daughter to a father. The reader will understand that by comparing the words she said when her father asked her to profess her love to him and she answered simply "I love

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    Kathleen Mcluskie’s essay about King Lear insists that there is no proper reading of the play that does not recognize the play’s inherent misogyny. This essay approaches the text from a feminist theory perspective‚ paying special attention to the role of patriarchy and how Shakespeare reinforces that system with this play. Ultimately‚ Mcluskie’s assessment of the play from that perspective holds that King Lear supports the notion of patriarchy and that Shakespeare must be subverted in order for alternatives

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    King Lear Critical Essays OCR English Literature 1. DEVINE JUSTICE 2. THE NATURAL ORDER 3. KINGSHIP 4. COLERIDGE’S FAMOUS CRITICAL ESSAY DEVINE JUSTICE King Lear inspires many philosophical questions; chief among them is the existence of divine justice. This concept was particularly important during the Elizabethan era‚ because religion played such a significant role in everyday life. Religious leaders directed people to expect that they would have to answer to a higher authority‚ expressing some

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    King Lear Essay Draft Shakespeare’s plays undeniably overflow with significance‚ but what makes them true literary masterpieces is the frightening level to which they address human issues. The issues of order and reconciliation are greatly emphasised in the play King Lear. The importance of order and reconciliation in daily life is stressed throughout the play. The complex order of society must be maintained in order to aid the prevention of the potentially fatal consequences of the disruption

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    shall express our darker purpose. Give me the map there. Know that we have divided?In three our kingdom” (1.2) .king Lear is blinded by manipulative personalities of his two daughter’s Regan and Goneril‚ he fails to reveal their true intentions of humiliating him and take advantage of him in order to benefit themselves. Being blinded by the need to be loved by his daughters king Lear delegates his authority to them. The desperation of the king who wanted to hear his daughter declare their love for

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    What part does deception of one kind or another play in Shakespeare’s King Lear? King Lear is a fictional tragedy written by William Shakespeare in 1604. The play provides a detailed description of the consequences of one man’s actions. Shakespeare displays deception as an act to cause someone to believe something that is untrue‚ or to mislead. There are five primary forms of deception that are displayed in King Lear: Lies‚ equivocations‚ concealments‚ exaggerations and understatements. Through

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    William Shakespeare’s King Lear is a timeless play whose textual integrity lends itself to a variety of interpretations and in exploring the human condition the text remains relevant across a wide range of contexts. It is possible to present the text as exploring and affirming the human condition‚ where humanity is defined as the ability to love and empathise. However‚ in the same instance‚ a nihilist perspective‚ such as Peter Brooke’s 1971 production of King Lear‚ challenges this by outlining that

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    Shakespeare’s King Lear is a Jacobean play that explores numerous themes of destruction‚ loyalty and natural law that were so prominent in his context. In the play Gloucester has a bastard son whose character reflects his immoral conception and who actively resents the limitations of his birth. While Jacobean England was undergoing numerous social changes because of factors such as increased trade‚ greater education and a forming middle class‚ Edmund represents the limitations in social mobility

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