Role of Identity in Romeo and Juliet Essay

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    Characters: Juliet from Romeo and Juliet and Desdemona from Othello, by William Shakespeare. William Shakespeare (1564-1616) was one of the greatest English poets and playwrights of Elizabethan era. His various contributions to the field of English literature include tragedies or tragic plays and tragicomedies, also known as romances. Even in 20th and 21st centuries, that is the present…

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    and indirectly alters the paths of many of William Shakespeare’s works. Romeo and Juliet was written in 1595, and is set in Verona, Italy. It is about two star-crossed, young lovers who fall victim to a tragic end. They come from two long-feuding families: Romeo of the Montagues, and Juliet of the Capulets. The hatred between these families causes many acts of violence throughout the story, with dire results. In Romeo and Juliet, animosity is an unforgiving force which alters people’s judgment,…

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    Comparative Analysis Masculinity, violence and tradition are three themes that flow between Romeo & Juliet and West Side Story, shaping each series of events and the character’s experience via actions and roles. Violence is a component central to both West Side Story and Romeo & Juliet’s narrative and in a way encapsulates many other textual elements as well. By nature of conflict, violence can arise with duality, as solution to a problem and as catalyst for further action. And because violent…

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    “What’s in a name?” (Shakespeare 2.2.42) Juliet asks in her famous line, a declaration of her devotion to Romeo which paradoxically emphasizes the importance of names in the Romeo and Juliet in general. Written four centuries later, Water By The Spoonful echoes this sentiment by allowing characters to name themselves online and, therefore, control and dictate their identities. Both Shakespeare and Hudes select names pregnant with meaning as a tool for characterization; however, while Shakespeare…

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    decisions to shape their identity. Some psychologist belief in the theory that depend their environment and parents enroll in their life will mark in their identity…

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    victims of gender inequality. Men ruled, men dictated, and men determined what was best for the females in society. The concept of gender roles has roots dating back to the beginning of the time, and in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Shakespeare addresses this issue by illustrating the effects firsthand. Society promotes the inferiority of women by limiting their roles in society. In A Midnight Summer’s Dream, women are viewed as men’s possessions. In the first scene of the play, Egeus decides that…

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    Identity. Identity, as defined by the Oxford English Dictionary, is the fact of being who or what a person or thing is. In other words, it is who you are and what makes up who you are. For example, someone’s identity could be the artist who makes paintings about same sex love or the writer who makes stories on a girl who surpassed the standards of her religion . The concept of identity is real easy to understand. My opinion on “Identity” is that no one no matter what someone’s identity is…

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    his first play and doesn’t know much about theater and how it works. He wants Harry Nash to be the lead role, but also needs a women to be the other role in the play. As the narrator was at the telephone company, he runs into a beautiful looking women who would fit that role. Her name was Helene, the narrator asked that she’d come at try out for the play and get the role. After she got the role, she began…

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    Warm Bodies by Isaac Marion is a romantic novel that has similar aspects to William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. It follows a zombie on his journey of falling in love with a human called Julie. This novel, written in 2010 and set in a post zombie apocalypse, examines the roles of identity and memory in an ever changing world for zombies and humans alike. The role of memory and identity in Warm Bodies for zombies is a concept they have to grasp. As R said on the fourth page of the book “No…

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    among teenagers” (Turakhia). Teenagers all over the world, both in life and literature, commit suicide for their own reasons. In William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, both of the main characters commit suicide. The internal and external problems that the teenagers must face become too much for them to handle causing them to take their own lives. Juliet says, “Unless thou tell me how I may prevent it. If in thy wisdom thou canst give me no help… I long to die, If what thou speak’st speak not of…

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