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    which requires the audience to be profoundly moved by the course of events can be applied to Othello‚ a play that closely follows the tragic plot as outlined by Aristotle. According to Aristotle‚ the tragic character in a tragedy is a good person‚ not all good or bad‚ who begins in a rank of high degree and importance and then experiences a downfall due to a tragic flaw‚ something of which the protagonist Othello displays. The downfall of the central character (in this case Othello) is a reason which

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    Othello's Flaws

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    Shakespeare’s plays always contain a tragic hero and what is a tragic hero without his tragic flaw. His characters are brought down by their own weakness or circumstances beyond their control. An example of this is Macbeth‚ where the witches and Lady Macbeth were causes of his downfall beyond his control. In Othello’s case‚ his own weaknesses are the causes of his downfall. So yes‚ I believe that Othello’s own weakness is responsible for the play’s tragic outcome through Iago‚ Desdemona‚ Emilia and

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    as a “hook” to engage the audience. Shakespeare rarely introduces his tragic figure at this stage. 2. Inciting Force: An incident that introduces the conflict and sets in motion the rising action of the play. 3. Hamartia (errors of judgement): The tragic figure suffers from a tragic flaw in character. As a result of this flaw s/he makes errors of judgement that are later directly responsible for the hero/ine’s tragic downfall‚ leading to the catastrophe of the play. At this point the protagonist

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    trgedy

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    In essence‚ tragedy is the mirror image or negative of comedy. For instead of depicting the rise in circumstances of a dejected or outcast underdog‚ tragedy shows us the downfall of a once prominent and powerful hero.   The most influential theorist of the genre is Aristotle‚ whose Poetics has guided the composition and critical interpretation of tragedy for more than two millennia. Distilling the many penetrating remarks contained in this commentary‚ we

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    Essay on cuckoo's nest

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    How does Kesey use narrative structure‚ foreshadowing and symbolism to create a tragic form in ‘One flew over the cuckoo’s nest’? Introduction: - Novel name / author - General overview; In his novel Kesey uses tragic form in illustrating events in an asylum that serves as a microcosm of 1960’s American society. - Brief explanation of tragic form and how techniques contribute to tragic form - Linking sentence into narrative structure Body • PARAGRAPH #1 : Narrative structure - Topic sentence:

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    Hamlet - the Tragic Hero

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    Hamlet The Tragic Hero The playwright William Shakespeare reveals a tragic hero in his greatest tragedy "Hamlet". This hero is the young prince Hamlet. He fulfills all of Aristotle’s requirements for a tragic hero. Three key events in the play demonstrate these requirements: First‚ when Hamlet does not murder Claudius at his first opportunity after being asked by his father’s ghost‚ Secondly‚ his confrontation with Ophelia regarding her returning his gifts‚ and lastly his reaction to Claudius’s

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    Brutus Soliloquy Quotes

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    insight into the inner most thoughts of Marcus Brutus as he decides if he should kill his best friend‚ Caesar. Brutus’ mental anguish and demonstrations of major flaws proves that Julius Caesar is a tragedy and he is the tragic hero. Brutus establishes his role as the tragic hero by expressing the internal struggle between his love for Rome and Caesar through his inability to make rational decisions; ultimately succumbing to his lack of self-knowledge and deception. Brutus deceives himself

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    Antigone as a Heroine

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    Despite tradition‚ Sophocles chose a woman to lead his story. Strong willed and quick witted‚ Antigone proves to be a loyal sister and pure wife. Antigone is noble of birth. Her hamartia is she shows hubris‚ a classic tragic hero trait‚ when telling Creon‚ “And I‚ whom no man’s frown can frighten‚ Am far from risking heaven’s frown by flouting these‚ I need no trumpeter from you to tell me I must die‚ we all die anyway.” (210) She takes on the role of her better‚ a man. When she buries he brother

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    Dr Faustus as a Tragedy

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    Struggle‚ conflict‚ suffering and failure may be the inescapable attendants but the human spirit is not stifled in its pursuits by what attends to them. The ability to withstand them is the tragic glory of man. Marlowe’s tragedy‚ therefore‚ is in fact the tragedy of one man – the rise‚ fall and death of the tragic hero. His heroes are titanic characters afire with some indomitable passion or inordinate ambition discarding all moral codes and ethical principles and plunging headlong to achieve their end

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    A Tragic hero can best be defined as a significant person who has a tragic flaw that eventually leads to his downfall‚ which he faces with dignity and courage. Jay Gatsby in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby is a great example of a tragic hero. He is a romantic dreamer who wishes to fulfill his ideal by amassing wealth in hopes of impressing and eventually winning the heart of the love of his life‚ Daisy. Gatsby’s tragic flaw lies in his inability to see that the real and the ideal cannot

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