1. I was confused when I first started reading this, I got a bit lost when the setting kept changing and the magical elements thrown me off at first. As I kept looking back through the story and rereading parts I started to understand this world more. Shakespeare does a great job of encapturing you in this world with the way he lets the characters decide their actions. The switch from first to third person does a fantastic job of giving us all the information we need, and the way everything falls into place at the end just makes this story that much better. 2. The genre of A Midsummer Night's Dream is comedy, fantasy, and romance. 3. Exposition: Theseus and Hippolyta, both noble and wealthy, are preparing for their wedding, and all is …show more content…
Once the characters enter the woods the story is completely taken over by the fairies, the author emphasizes the woods and makes it not realistic. Bringing in magical powers that the fairies have like turning Puck's head into a donkey and having love potions that completely changes a characters feelings. The actions that the characters take are only enhanced by the setting, without the magical aspect of the fairies the woods would just be another generic woods that we've all seen before. Adding magic into a story can either make or break it and Shakespear did thid just right. The idea of having powers in a certain place makes that location memorable, we want to come back and see more of this forest. Hardships that our characters face are made even more challenging when magic is involved, Hermia now not only has to worry about being caught and sentenced to death but also getting caught up in a potion. 8. The point of view varies from scene to scene, the story is mostly told in third person with it changing to first person when the characters exchange dialogue. "I will meet you," said Lysander, "in the wood a few miles without the city; in that delightful wood where we have so often walked with Helena in the pleasant month of May." This is an example of first person being …show more content…
In A Midsummer Night's Dream, the point of view is third person omniscient. I think that is is the point of view because the author wanted us to see how everyone is feeling and what they're thinking because different things are planned to happen at different times, and Shakespeare wanted to raise suspicion in the readers minds as to what is going to happen when these plans crash together. If The point of view of this book was 1st person and through the eyes of Puck, we wouldn't just always hear the side stories about him, We would know every little detail. For example, we would know how he put the love potion on Titania and Lysander, and if he did it on purpose or
Love is a timeless topic which Shakespeare explores in depth in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream “. Shakespeare utilizes the format of a play within a play to communicate the complexities of love. Love is a force that characters cannot control. The play includes scenes of lovers searching for fulfillment in the arms of characters who are unavailable. The magic love potion wreaks havoc between actual lovers and it is clear just how negatively it is portrayed. The entire play revolves around the difficulties of maintaining love and how foolish and insecure the pursuit of love can make us. It also touches on the fickleness of love, that love can be
Hermia’s speech in Act 2, Scene 2, of Shakespeare 's A Midsummer Night’s Dream, contains an abundance of dream imagery. She has awoken from a terrible dream after falling asleep in the forest with Lysander. They were lost and tired so they decided to rest. Lysander wanted to sleep beside her but, she refused since they are not yet married and while they slept Puck applied a love potion on Lysander’s eyes thinking he was Demetrius. Lysander wakes and is repulsed by the sight of Hermia and never wants to see her again because he is now in love with Helena. Hermia awakes from her terrible dream and retells it thinking that Lysander is nearby listening. Then she realizes that he is not there and she does not see him anywhere. Hermia expresses the sentiment that she will find Lysander or she will surely die. She stated,
Have you ever heard a quote that really stood out to you. And then you went and told you friends that quote and they liked it. And they told people who told other people and then everyone liked. Eventually, you know with all the social media programs these days, its going to end up on facebook or instagram and even more people are going to find out about it. Thats one way a quote can become famous but another way is if it is in a popular movie or book. In this case it is from one of Shakespeare's finest and most known, A Midsummer Night’s Dream. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream the quote “the course of true love never did run smoothly” applies to the different people in the book: the first couple is Hermia and Lysander, Second Demetrius and Helena, and finally Pyramus and Thisbe.
Shakespeare’s usage of metaphor and simile in A Midsummer Night’s Dream is best understood as an attempt to provide some useful context for relationships and emotions, most often love and friendship, or the lack thereof. One example of such a usage is in Act 3, Scene 2 of the play. Here, the two Athenian couples wake up in the forest and fall under the effects of the flower, thus confusing the romantic relationships between them. Hermia comes to find her Lysander has fallen for Helena. Hermia suspects that the two have both conspired against her in some cruel joke, and begins lashing out against Helena. She says “We, Hermia, like two artificial gods, / Have with our needles created both one flower, / Both one sampler sitting on one cushion, / Both warbling of one song, both in one key; / As if our hands, our sides, voices, and minds, / Had been incorporate. So we grew together, / Like a double cherry, seeming parted; / But yet a union in partition / Two lovely berries moulded on one stem: / So, with two seeming bodies, but one heart; / Two of the first, like coats in heraldry, / Due but to one, and crowned with one crest.” (Shakespeare 2.3.206-13). Shakespeare writes this list of vibrant metaphors to establish the prior relationship between these two characters and to make it evident how affected Helena is by this unexpected turn of events, as well as to add a greater range of emotion to the comedy, thereby lending it more literary and popular appeal.
William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream weaves stories of social ranks in the commedia dell’arte and some of its easily recognized stock characters. Shakespeare uses commedia dell’arte characters in A Midsummer Night’s Dream to capture our imagination and amuse us.
William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream has been categorized as a comedy play because of all the characters being passionately in love to the point of being foolish. It’s a play all about love, and the characters that are in love are only young adults, so they are still naive when it comes to love. Their naivety and foolishness regarding love is what allows them to be taken advantage of by mischievous fairies when they all run away into the woods. By critiquing the love affairs and numerous misunderstandings that occur within the mystical woods, I argue that Shakespeare 's A Midsummer Night 's Dream portrays the characters’ young love as a foolish fantasy with drastic consequences.
In a Midsummer Night’s Dream, Shakespeare story about romantic desire. Theseus and Hippolyta, are about to be married; both of them are wonderful figures from classical mythology. (Greek Mythology) Theseus is a great warrior, a kinsman of Hercules; Hippolyta is an Amazon warrior-woman, defeated in battle by Theseus. (Theseus and Hippolyta) He was longing for the wedding day, and this is what opens the play and closing the play with their exit marriage bed. (Theseus and Hippolyta).
“Audiences can gain a better understanding of ways to behave in a specific relationship through comparing past and present representations of them in texts.”
As usual, Demetrius insists Helena stop following him; he even vows to harm her if she doesn't leave him alone. Taking pity on Helena, Oberon instructs Puck to put some love juice in Demetrius' eyes at a moment when Helena will be the first person he sees upon waking.
Shakespeare's play “Midsummer Night’s Dream” was portrayed very effectively through the Hoffman movie as it followed the themes of the original play, it effectively uses cinema techniques, and helps the audience connect and learn. Theme are an important part of a play and the Hoffman movie admires these themes and portrays them phenomenally well. The Hoffman movie shows the power of dreams and how real they seem but at the end some of us are affected as others are just touched. A major theme of shakespeare's play is reality vs dream, the Hoffman movie portrays this theme very similarly resulting in a more influential play that follows shakespeare's ideas and so without the replica of these themes the movie wouldn't seem as a effective representation.
Symbols help to play an important part in giving a deeper meaning to a story. William Shakespeare uses a variety of symbols in his play A Midsummer Night’s Dream and by using these symbols he offers some insight onto why certain events take place in the play. Symbols are sometimes hard to decipher but as the reader continues to read the symbol’s meaning might become more clear. Shakespeare uses a variety of symbols in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, but this paper will only discuss four of the major symbols.
In the play A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Lysander speaks to his lover Hermia about eloping from Athens instead of her being forced to marry someone she does not love. Lysander expresses his ideas in an overly complicated fashion which is quite difficult to apprehend. However, it can be deciphered with a little bit of work and comprehension. Hermia expresses her concerns for their relationship, how their love story will end like any other and that these problems are all a part of love. Lysander states that Hermia has a good opinion, so she should hear him out. He has a wealthy aunt who is a widow and has no children. She lives around seven leagues or twenty four miles from Athens and considers me to be her only son. Over there he can marry Hermia
Julie Taymor’s fondness for staged films is widely known, and the filmmaker makes now her third incursion in Shakespearean territory with the comedy “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, which was captured in the sequence of her own off-Broadway production play. After the huge visibility obtained with the Broadway's “The Lion King” in 1997, her cinematic career began strongly and confident two years later with the gloomy “Titus”, starring Anthony Hopkins as the title character. After “Frida”, a quaint biopic about the surrealist Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, and “Across the Universe”, a lame musical inspired on the music of The Beatles, she returns to Shakespeare with the “The Tempest”, her weakest film so far. “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, despite extended
In any society there are rules and conventions that must be followed in order to uphold the established ideas of normality. These rules are imposed with the intentions of maintaining order and harmony; without them many would believe that society would fall into chaos. Within Shakespeare’s ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ these rules can be undermined in the confines of settings in which the supernatural reigns, allowing the characters to grow and develop before returning to society as changed people. Through this creation of comedic disorder, characters of authority are often displaced from their positions within a social hierarchy, thus making the supernatural an integral part of Shakespeare’s comedy. Without the supernatural elements that
A Midsummer Night's Dream is a play about four Athenian lovers. Theseus listens to both Hermia and her father’s request and he tells her to bend to her father’s will or die due to the old Athenian law. Hermia and Lysander flee Athens, into the domain of the fairy kingdom. At this time, Oberon is in a fight with Titania. This fight is over a human child of Titania’s friend. Oberon tells Puck, one of his loyal servants, to get a flower hit by Cupid’s arrow, and drop the oil into Demetrius’s and Titania’s eyes. However, Puck drops the oil into Lysander’s eyes due to Oberon’s vague description, making him fall in love with Helena and despise Hermia. Titania falls in love Bottom, who has the head of an ass, after Oberon places the oil