Friday, October 25, 2019
William Shakespeares Presentation of the Two Pairs of Lovers in Much A
William Shakespeare's Presentation of the Two Pairs of Lovers in Much Ado About Nothing                                       'Much Ado About Nothing' would have been pronounced 'Much Ado About     Noting' in Shakespeare's time. Noting would infer seeing how things     appear on the surface as opposed to how things really are. This     provides an immediate clue as to how the play and the presentation of     the story of the two pairs of lovers would be received by an audience     of the time, living as they did in a patriarchal society which was     based on social conventions and appearances. It can also be taken as     an initial comment by Shakespeare about that society and its values     and moral codes. Modern audiences, however, live in a more sexually     egalitarian society. Although appearances are still important, values     are more dependent on self-analysis and self-knowledge.       It is significant that the story of Hero and Claudio, the first of the     pairs of lovers, is one that Elizabethan audiences would have probably     been familiar with. Ariosto and also Spenser in the 'Faerie Queene'     had presented this love story as a tale of chivalry and high morality.     Therefore the audiences of the time would be familiar with the     conventional characters of Claudio and Hero.       Hero displays all the qualities the Elizabethan audience would have     admired in a woman. She knows her place in society. Her father is     there to be obeyed, and she herself recognises how she should be     punished were the charges against her proved to be true,       ' O my father       Prove you that any man with me conversed       à ¢?à ¦Ã ¢?à ¦       Refuse me, hate me, torture me to death.'       There is an absence of dialogue b...              ... upon flouting conventions as discussed.       In 'Much Ado About Nothing', one may argue that Shakespeare decided to     have two sets of lovers to provide the audience with contrasting     perspectives on similar situations. One may also argue that the two     contrast between what was expected at the time against the     unconventional. In both cases Shakespeare's presentation of the     relationships between these two pairs of lovers implies criticism of     his shallow society and its conventions. Perhaps he set the story in     Italyas he may not have wished to upset his benefactors at home.       Modern audiences may only perhaps gain an appreciation of this element     in 'Much Ado About Nothing' as a study of Elizabethan society.       Their empathy and interest may therefore be based to a greater degree     in the characterisation of Benedick and Beatrice.                        
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