(Oppositions) Flashcards

1
Q

How is opposition suggested through the play?

A
  • Opposition -
  • Shakespeare uses oppositions in Romeo and Juliet to make the audience question conflict and opposition in their own lives and society. Shakespeare is able to bring polarising concepts together which allow the audience to analyse how they interact. By doing this, Shakespeare is able to highlight obvious differences as well as the more implicit similarities.
  • Shakespeare often uses juxtapositions and oxymoronic language to present these contrasting and contradicting ideas in the play. He also creates characters which have contrasting or similar personalities.
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2
Q

Why does Capulets and Montagues support this theme?
(include Mercutio and Tybalt)

A
  • Capulets and Montagues -
  • The play is based on a conflict between these two opposing families. This instantly grounds the play as a story based on opposing forces and their destructive powers.
  • Didactic means when something is intended to teach a moral lesson.
  • It is important to note that the Montagues and Capulets have an “ancient grudge” against each other, which suggests that they are very different people, However, the reality is that the families are more similar than they are different. They’re both noble families with characters who have similar attributes such as Mercutio, a Montague, and Tybalt, a Capulet.
  • While Romeo and Juliet is a love story and a tragedy it also is a moral story as it fulfils a didactic purpose. At the end of the play the two families realise the error of their ways and make peace with each other. Lord Capulet says “O brother Montague, give me thy hand”. Through the tragic ending in the play, Shakespeare illustrates the dangers of opposition and conflict in life.
  • Mercutio and Tybalt
  • Tybalt and Mercutio are similar characters as their inclination towards violence make them catalysts for the plot. In Act 3 Scene 1 we can see both men starting fights which ultimately lead to their deaths:
    → In this scene Tybalt is looking to fight Romeo. He calls him a “villain” to try and entice him to fight. Despite this Romeo refuses to fight Tybalt. Mercutio does not understand why Romeo is refusing to fight. In the Elizabethan era it would have been typical to challenge someone to a duel if they disrespect you. Mercutio decides to step in and puts forward the challenge by saying to Tybalt: “O calm dishonourable, vile submission!… Tybalt, you ratcatcher, will you walk?”. This decision ultimately results in his death. ◆Both of these characters contrast with Romeo who does not want to join in the violence. Their masculinity is contrasted with Romeo’s feminine traits
  • Whilst Tybalt and Mercutio are very similar, they also juxtapose each other; Tybalt is a very serious character who introduces the reality of the situation to the audience whereas Mercutio adds comedic relief.
    → An example of Mercutio’s comedy is found in Act 1 Scene 4 when Romeo is still depressed over Rosaline. Mercutio says his Queen Mab speech which includes moments of comedy as he talks about Queen Mab (a fairy who visits people in their dreams) “Tickling a parson’s nose as he lies asleep”.
    →This juxtaposes Tybalt who never has a moment of humour. Even at the party in Act 1 Scene 5 Tybalt is angry that Romeo has gatecrashed the feast saying that Romeo is a “villain”. Lord Capulet has to make him calm down.
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3
Q

How does Shakespeare show love and hate?

A
  • Love and Hate -
  • Shakespeare juxtaposes love and hate throughout the play He even subverts incredibly romantic scenes with moments filled with hate and conflict. The opposition of love and hate within the play creates tension.
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4
Q

How does Shakespeare show love and hate in act 1 scene 5?

A
  • Act 1 Scene 5 -
  • This is the iconic scene where the two lovers meet for the first time. Here the lovers speak in a sonnet form and their language is filled with religious imagery. This exchange is completely fuelled by romance which leads to a climax: their kiss. Juliet tells Romeo: “You kiss by th’ book.”.
  • However, just before this exchange, there is a conflict between Tybalt and Lord Capulet. Tybalt is enraged by Romeo and his friends gate-crashing the “feast”. Tybalt believes that Romeo is “villain” and should be thrown out of the party. However, Lord Capulet doesn’t want to spoil the celebrations and demands that Romeo “shall be endured”.
    →This is one of the few times that the audience is able to see in house conflict. In this instance it occurs between the patriarch of the family and one of his relatives. While Tybalt tries to persist in the end he says “I will withdraw” which emphasises Lord Capulet’s authority.
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5
Q

How does Shakespeare show love and hate in scene 1 act 3?

A
  • Act 2 Scene 6 and Act 3 Scene 1 -
  • Another instance in which love and hate are put together is after the two lovers get married.
    → The Friar conducts the ceremony saying “Come, come with me, and we will make short work.” Friar Lawrence basically says here that they have to go quickly and make the ceremony fast.
  • In the Elizabethan times it was forbidden to show religious ceremonies (such as weddings) on stage.
    → This scene is immediately juxtaposed by the climax of the play Act 3 scene 1 where Mercutio and Tybalt die. Shakespeare manages to put together the epitome of love which is marriage and the epitome of hate which is murder to illustrate to the audience the simplicity as well as the complexity of life in presenting the two most powerful emotions alongside each other.
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6
Q

How does Shakespeare show the opposition between love and death?

A
  • Life and Death -
  • Shakespeare shows the duality between life and death within the play. A key theme within any tragedy is death, it is used by Shakespeare to release tension and purge emotions.
  • It was the usual practise in Shakespearean tragedies to have a series of deaths in the final scene. Romeo and Juliet is no different as the final scene encompasses the deaths of Paris, Romeo and Juliet.
  • Death:
  • In Romeo’s final speech before he commits suicide he contrasts the sadness of death with a feeling of elation saying “How oft when men are at the point of death/ Have they been merry, which their keepers call A lightning before death!”.
    →Here Romeo is saying here that some men describe happiness before they die, he shows the audience that he is experiencing a similar kind of high which he compares to “lightning”. (This metaphor is also used by Juliet to describe their love which is “too like lightning”).
  • Life:
  • The theme of life is shown in a subtle way within the play. There aren’t any births, instead there are new beginnings which can be seen as symbolic of new life.
    → The love between Romeo and Juliet is symbolic of this new life. They cannot remember a life before they had met each other, and they cannot imagine a life without each other. → Equally, they forge a new life together as a married couple.
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