Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Romeo and Juliet - Act 3
- Scene 1
- Mercutio: A plague a'both your houses
- Theme: Fate
and Destiny
- Repetition/Foreshadowing
- Love is a disease,
causes harm
- Plague - almost like
death/causes death
- Romeo: Thy beauty hath made me
effeminate/And in my temper
softened valour's steel
- Love weakened Romeo, gender
roles switched between R+J
- Theme: Patriarcal society
- Private vs. public world -
publicly Romeo is is the
pinnacle of masculinity,
however privately he is
emotional and therefore weak
and infatuated
- Romeo: I am fortune's fool
- Theme: Fate and Destiny
- Admitting being a fool, doesn't take
responsibility for his own actions -
highlights his immaturity, believes he
is a victim/slave to fate/destiny
- Deflecting/adicating responsibilty
- This always leads him to disaster and chaos
- Ultimately it is their own
actions which lead to their
fate
- He shows self pity, and is still in
the same immature mind set - he
believes that he is still weak
against fortune's
power/influence over him
- Romeo: Till thou shalt
know the reason of my
love, good Capulet which
name I tender as dearly
as my own
- Theme:
Honour/Loyalty/Famalam
- Dramatic Irony
- Romeo, for once, is the most mature in
this scene - he is naïve for believing that
he can avoid the conflict of the families,
so Tybalt believes that Romeo is mocking
him
- Romeo speaks in truth, 'half truths'
and full out lies (progressively gets
further from morality) as he
understands/wants to hide
- Scene 2
- Juliet: Beautiful tyrant, fiend angelical, Dove-feathered raven
- Oxymorons
- Dove: seen to be stupid and silly +
present peace
- Juxtaposition
- The love was like a dove
(stupid, but peaceful in some
way to Juliet)
- Juliet has not had to choose between
family and Romeo before and therefore, is
very confused now
- Raven: clever, loyal, BUT
not pretty
- Juliet is frustrated because Romeo has a hold over her.
He is deciding the course of her future with his actions.
- Love
- Juliet: Shall I speak ill of him that is my husband?
… villain, didst thou kill my cousin? That villain
cousin would have killed my husband
- Juliet displays progress from simple, plain,
obedient girl to a more “mature” women who’s
loyalty is to her husband: CHARACTER
DEVELOPMENT
- Links to Act 3, Scene 5
- Patriarchy
- Juliet’s self determination: she
has the duty to romeo since he is
her family now. However, she is
not free from her famility since
she is trapped in patriarchy. This
freedom is allusive
- Loyalty/Family
- Scene 3
- Romeo: they may seize On the white
wonder of dear Juliet’s hand
- Romeo is unwilling to realise that the law is the law.
Isn’t admitting that he got banished cuz he killed
someone.
- He is focising on the physical side of his
relationship: not thinking about the
relationship, rather thinking about touch
+ obsessed with physical consummation
+ no mention of their relationship as
such
- He has not stopped to consider whether Juliet
wants him anymore
- Romeo shows continuity: thread
of melodrama throughout the play
throughout the play
- Juliet can be seen as fickle as she complies
with Romeo. Character development
cannot happen in just two days FICKLE
- Love
- Patriarchy
- Nurse: Stand up, stand, and you be a man, For Juliet's sake... why
should you fall so deep an O
- The nurse is acting as an authouritive
figure. Her and Friar Lawrence, to some
extent have a higher sense of morality as
they were not brought up with the same
ideas. They were responsible for marrying
Romeo and Juliet + they did not do it for
economic purposes, rather for love and
pure intensions
- This is the first time
someone told Romeo
what to do. This is
shocking because the
nurse is of lower class
- Patriarchy
- Gender Presentation
- Repetion
"Stand"
- compounding and
demanding him to
suck it up
- Friar Lawrence: Thy tears are womanish... unseemly woman in a
seeming man
- Iambic Pentametor
- Juxtaposition
- Romeo: In what vile part of this anatomy, doth my
name lodge?...sack the hateful mansion
- ROMEO IS HOLDING A
DAGGER WHEN HE SAYS
THIS. He wants to know in
what part of his body his
name is located, so he can
cut it out. He's threatening
to kill himself here
- "sack the hateful mansion"
being a metaphor for
destroying the body in which
he lives)
- METAPHOR
- Conflict
- Scene 4
- Lord Capulet: I think she will be ruled in all
respects by me
- Patriarchy
- Possession
- Lord C. knows
Juliet WILL obey
him because she
has to
- Lord C acts less with his heart and more
with his will and cultural role
- Tybalt's untimely and the resurgence of
animosity between his and the
Montague family, Lord Capulet seems
much less concerned with the feelings
of his daughter than he has previously
- Lord Capulet's drastic change in character his
capricious personality
- Instead of respecting Juliet's choice and trusting
her decision, Lord Capulet becomes forceful and
insensitive.
- Links and contrasts with Act 1
- Scene 5
- Juliet: Yond light is not daylight; I know it, I. It is some
meteor that the sun exhales To be to thee this night
a torchbearer
- Light is not being seen as a positive
thing. Even though light has always
been positively seen describes, REAL
light is negative because it does not
work to their favour.
- This romantism related
idea of how their love
is not for this world
- they are denying that it is the next
day b/c they know that they have
to separate and do not want to
- Light and Darkness
- Love
- Individual vs
Society
- Juliet: Art thou gone so, love, lord, ay husband, friend?
- Lord: Juliet is saying that
Romeo is superior
- Blasphemous
- Order of nouns
- lord is before
husband and
friend but after
love
- shows that their love is
over the lord = it is
against God
- Double-meaning:
Lord could mean
father--> her love
for her father is
after love
- significant because it
shows the patriarchy he
bestows on her + he
controls her
- Patriarchy
- Lord Capulet:
disobedient wretch
- Lord C: you be mine, I'll give you to my
friend. An you be not, hang, beg, starve, die
in the streets,
- Conveys the sense of patriarchy,
presents women as inferior and under
men’s control
- Capulet threatens Juliet with
their very relationship as
father and daughter. If she
does not marry Paris, he will
never look at her again. He is
forcing her to choose
between his will and love and
her own.
- Lord Capulet refers to Juliet as a burden
due to her rejection of the proposal. He
also implies that she’s disposable property
as she’s refusing to follow his decree.
- Patriarchy
- Rebellion
- Juliet: Methinks I see thee... as
one dead in the bottom of
a tomb
- lovers experience visions
that blatantly
foreshadow the end of
the play
- Foreshadow
- This is to be the last moment they
spend alive in each other’s company.
When Juliet next sees Romeo he will
be dead, and as she looks out of her
window she seems to see him dead
already
- Death