Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Themes
- Transgression
- Annabella wants to
break free from the
normal traditions of a
woman her age.
- Eve does exactly
want she was told
not to and eats from
the tree, being
tempting by Satan
and then being
outcast from Eden.
- Giovanni goes against
what "the holy counsel"
told him and still sleeps
with his sister.
- Order
- The Cardinal and the Friar are
desperately trying to keep order
throughout the play but, neither of
them succeed.
- God wants to keep order -
casting Satan out and
telling Adam and Eve not to
eat from the Tree.
- Doesn't try
every hard?
- Temptation
- Giovanni temps her sister
into loving him and
participating in an
incestious relationship
- Giovanni's plea with his
is sister is one-sided - he
is guilt tripping her.
- Satan wants to tempt Mankind
into eating form the Tree so that
he can have his revenge against
God.
- Satan goes for Eve because he
believes that she is the weaker
sex and that she will drag Adam
too.
- Satan's
temptation is
complicated and
well thought out
showing his
dedication to what
he wants to do,
- Temptation is shown as
a bad thing in both texts
as they both have bad
after effects.
- Fall
- Adam and Eve's
literal fall from Eden.
- Giovanni and
Annabella's fall from
society and their
death.
- Both the falls are
foreshadowed throughout
the text - deaths of
characters, assonance.
- Ford does not offer
any opinions to
whether the
characters are good
or bad, when Milton
wants to "justify the
ways of God to
man".
- Punishment
- Both the texts have a
destructive ending,
where the two main
characters are
punished.
- Adam and Eve
fall.
- Giovanni and Annabella's
punishments are their
deaths (bloody ending).
- The punishments are
because they have done
something wrong - Eve and
Adam are literally being
punished by God.
- The punishments are
foreshadowed
throughout the texts -
repetition of down, and
Hippolita's death.
- Pride
- All the characters have
lost their pride because
they have become
obsessed with another
aim.
- Annabella has no pride
when she goes mad in
Soranzo's chamber.
- Hippolita has no
pride when she
agrees to murder
the man that she
had once loved.
- Satan has no
pride - he uses
trickery and
deception to get
what he wants.
- Adam possibly manages to retain some
pride as he is not tricked by Satan, but he
gives that up when he falls with Eve.
- Desire
- Satan's desire for
revenge.
- Giovanni and the other
suitors have a desire for
Annabella - Giovanni will do
anything do get hold of her.
- Eve's desire for the tree and
for the fruit that Satan
promises her.
- Adam's desire to be with
Eve so much so that he
gives himself up and falls
with her.
- Hippolita's
desire for
revenge
against
Soranzo.
- Passion
- Giovanni and Annabella
- Giovanni feels very
passionately about his
sister.
- He wants to totally
own her: ripping out
her heart is his final
possession.
- Their relationship is driven
by sex and desire, even
though it goes against
what is acceptable for the
time.
- Eve's femininity and sexuality
- She uses a
"sweet accent
renewed" to
persuade Adam
to let them work
alone.
- She finds the tree
"alluring" implying that she
is being seduced by it.
- The language that
Satan uses,
assonance, repetition
of 's', is seducing her.
- Adam and Eve have a
passionate relationship,
they are going to have
children and Adam will
give everything up for
Eve.
- Relationships
- Giovanni and Annabella
- Annabella and
her suitors
- Eve and Satan
- Adam and Eve
- Women
- Philotis
- "shall I resolve to
be a nun?"
- Representing everything that
a woman was expected to be
when it was written.
- She is virtuous,
good, honest and
does what the
male characters
to do.
- Hippolita
- Bitter older character who becomes
obsessed with the idea of revenge
which eventually ends in her death.
- Representing what
Annabella might become -
disrespected "old mole" that
no one wants to be around.
- Annabella
- Rebelling
against the
typical
stereotypes of a
woman.
- Florio is going to
allow to pick any
husband that she
wants - "I would not
have her marry
wealth"
- Young and naiive -
believing what Giovanni
tells hers and going along
with the relationship even
though it will end in her
death.
- Sticking up for herself against
Soranzo, not giving away who
Giovanni, and not wanting to
marry her suitors.
- Subverting
the traditional
idea of a
woman.
- Eve
- Satan views her as the inferior
sex, which is why he decides to
tempt her, but she does show
some strength.
- She manages to persuade
Adam to let them work together
and she does hold her own
against Satan for a while.
- Seen as naiive
because she is the
reason why
Mankind is doomed
after them.
- The way Milton
describes her is very
feminine - she hidden by
a cloud of perfume, and
Satan calls her
"empress"
- She is also the perfect
wife - she works with
her husband, and is
going to provide him
with children.
- Setting
- Eden
- Makes Satan's
presence feel
wrong and alien.
- Adam and Eve are being
cast out of somewhere
wonderful making their sin
seem even worse than it
was.
- Eden becomes all dark
and miserable after the
tree - their fall literally
hurting the setting.
- Foreign Setting
- Used to make the
audience feel better
about where they lived.
- Showing the
corrupt
Catholic
religion in
other
countries.
- Context with
Romeo and Juliet -
"fair Verona"
- Makes the play feel exotic and
exciting for an audience -
escaping from their normal lives.
- Tragedy
- 'Tis Pity' is set in
another country and
shows the corrupt
nature of that country
mainly through religion.
- The end of the play has
many deaths fitting with the
revenge tragedy.
- Annabella's heart being
ripped out would be shocking
to an audience.
- Subplot - Hippolita and Vasques
have the subplot which clashes with
the main plot at the end of play.
- Although the end of
Paradise Lost does
not fit with a traditional
tragedy, because of
what happens with
Adam and Eve it could
still considered tragic.
- Because Satan wins and
God fails.