"Situational irony used in the tragedy of julius caesar" Essays and Research Papers

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    Julius Caesar

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    Every classical tragedy has a tragic hero and‚ in turn‚ every tragic hero has a tragic flaw. A tragic flaw is any weakness of a hero that eventually leads to their demise. In Shakespeare’s play The Tragedy of Julius Caesar‚ Brutus has a few tragic flaws. Although Brutus is an honorable and true man‚ these flaws inhibit his actions and lead to his eventual ruin. One fatal flaw of Brutus is that he is very naïve. Brutus’ naïveté leads to a string of bad decision making. A big mistake that Brutus

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    events. In Julius Caesar‚ Shakespeare shows through a series of events that being careful is important. The characters’ situational misinterpretations show that by misunderstanding the signs and their warnings‚ chaos can happen. Decius’ misinterpretation of Calphurnia’s dream leads to Caesar’s death because he manipulated the understanding of the dream in his favor. When Calphurnia is distress‚ afraid that something might happen to Caesar in response to her dream‚ Decius makes sure that Caesar and Calphurnia

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    Power- Examine the ability to make things happen by words alone. Rhetoric and Power is a theme well used in William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. Mark Antony deceives the conspirators into believing he is on their side when he discovers them with Julius’ corpse‚ Brutus’ speech after killing Julius Caesar makes the Romans believe Julius was a bad person‚ Mark Antony’s speech after Julius Caesar’s death makes the Romans furious at the conspirators. In the last two situations we see the point of

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    In The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare‚ he has 2 main characters named Brutus and Caesar. Caesar is the honorable leader that Rome’s peoples are wanting. Brutus is the one that gets deceived into believing Rome’s peoples want him just because the conspirators and Cassuis want to get rid of Caesar. In this play there is betrayal that revolves around the inflexibility of Brutus and Caesar. An incident that shows inflexibility of Julius Caesar is when the Soothsayer steps from the

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    Julius Ceasar: 1953 vs. 1970 Julius Ceasar is a tragedy by William Shakespeare that is believed to have been written in 1599. It portrays the conspiracy against the Roman dictator Julius Caesar‚ his struggle between the demands of patriotism‚ honor‚ and friendship‚ and his assassination. It is one of several Roman plays that Shakespeare wrote that are based on true events from Roman history. After watching two films about Julius Ceasar‚ one made in 1953 and one made in 1970‚ I personally believe

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    Desire for power is often considered one of the strongest human drives. Throughout “The Tragedy of Julius Caesar” Cassius plays an enormous role in the assassination of Julius Caesar. Cassius’ clever use of persuasion leads to the death of Rome’s seemingly capable leader Caesar and causes discord within the Empire. By gathering a group of conspirators‚ using his close relationship with Brutus to his advantage‚ and his manipulation skills Cassius waters his victim’s tendencies rather than plant new

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    The obsession and thirst for power can lead to the corruption of one’s morals. In “The Tragedy of Julius Caesar” by William Shakespeare‚ Cassius’ hunger for leadership over Rome leads to impulsive decisions and an overall destruction to his morals. Throughout the play Cassius utilizes his manipulation skills to use Brutus to pave a way for power. He continued to drill false and inaccurate information into Brutus’ head‚ ultimately resulting in Brutus making poor decisions. These impulsive and uncharacteristic

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    The Tragedy of Marcus Brutus At times it seemed as if Julius Caesar and Marcus Brutus’ fortunes are tied to each other. While one is successful‚ the other has to make sacrifices. Brutus sides with Pompey‚ and then Caesar kills his ally. Both of their lives are complicated and entwined into a horrible‚ confusing mess. Caesar is adored by the people who give him power‚ and then Brutus kills him. They are never quite on the same page at the same time. Still‚ they suffer together‚ in varying degrees

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    Importance to the Play In Greek tragedies‚ the most commonly identified character is the tragic hero which is often either the protagonist or the antagonist. In fact‚ readers have often neglected the importance of minor characters and their huge impact on the play. In Julius Caesar‚ a Greek tragedy written by Shakespeare‚ minor characters like the soothsayer and Pindarus contribute to the play by altering the possible outcomes. At the beginning of the play‚ Caesar had just returned to Rome after

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    Julius and Caesar

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    basically Julius Caesar is a huge character in which people looked upon on. Except the conspirators whom wanted him gone. They tried to avoid him from the beginning to not cause the death of him. But as time came and they noticed how everyone wanted him as their king. They became jealous of him. Let’s get to know who the conspirators are and why they did this to Julius Caesar. Was it for jealousy‚ anger‚ or was it for something that no one knows.          Were the conspirators wrong to kill Julius Caesar

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