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Romeo and julliet.

Member rating: No Rating | Words: 759 | Submitted: Sat Sep 08 2007

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'Analyse the dramatic contribution of Juliet in Romeo and Juliet. Focus on two scenes in the play and consider how the original audience may have responded to Juliet and her dilemma'. The Elizabethan audience during the time of Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet. Saw a reflection of their own life's within his plays. Its appearance at this time was human rather than analytical or educational. One of the most important dimensions of Shakespeare's language is imagery. Through the use of metaphors, similes, passages of heightened natural description, Shakespeare's writing is to a finer degree than other writers of his time, which is why Romeo and Juliet is world famous. An Elizabethan audience's definition of a tragedy would be something that represents flaws and shortcomings which are universal but are emphasised by the prominence and nobility of the characters involved. This is exactly what Juliet provides within Romeo and Juliet. She seems essentially...

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