Titus Andronicus Act III Scene I - Analysing and Evaluating Dramatic scenes.
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Titus Andronicus Act III Scene I - Analysing and Evaluating Dramatic scenes In this essay I am going to be looking at dramatic and compelling scenes. I will be analysing what makes these scenes dramatic and showing how these scenes use contrasting and complimenting techniques to make connections with the audience to give each scene suspense and dramatics. When Titus is first seen in the beginning of act three scene one he prostrates himself and makes the plea to a non-existent audience, he represents the ultimate downfall of Rome: its greatest hero reduced to an unsuccessful supplicant to the soil. In his speech to the banished Lucius, the "civilized" rivalry between Romans and bloodlust of beasts converge: "Rome is but a wilderness of tigers" Together with the "consuming sorrow" of the abused Lavinia, this scene lays the foundation for a plot that increasingly concentrates on a circle of revenge that is...

