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From the exam board: "As part of their study of their selected Shakespeare play, students should engage with different interpretations."
Critical interpretations refer to the various ways in which literary texts are analyzed, understood, and evaluated by scholars, critics, and readers. These interpretations offer different perspectives on a text, examining elements such as themes, characters, plot, language, and context to uncover deeper meanings and implications.
These essays are referenced in Shakespeare: A Critical Anthology: Tragedy
"The characters struggle unsuccessfully to reconstruct a coherent worldview from the ruins of the old."
(Page 7, Essay: Shakespearean Tragedy)
"Let Rome in Tiber melt, and the wide arch Of the ranged empire fall! Here is my space." (Act 1, Scene 1)
"The time of universal peace is near. Prove this a prosperous day, the three-nooked world Shall bear the olive freely." (Act 4, Scene 6)
"I am dying, Egypt, dying; only I here importune death awhile, until Of many thousand kisses the poor last I lay upon thy lips." (Act 4, Scene 15)
"In the tragic theatre suffering and death are perceived as matter for grief and fear, after which it seems that grief and fear become in their turn matter for enjoyment."
(Page 9, Essay: The Pleasure of Tragedy)
"My desolation does begin to make A better life." (Act 5, Scene 2)
"Give me my robe, put on my crown; I have Immortal longings in me." (Act 5, Scene 2)
"O, withered is the garland of the war, The soldier's pole is fallen." (Act 4, Scene 15)
"The story, next, leads up to, and includes, the death of the hero. On the one hand (whatever may be true of tragedy elsewhere), no play at the end of which the hero remains alive is, in the full Shakespearean sense, a tragedy."
(Page 11, Essay: The Shakespearean Tragic Hero)
"I am dying, Egypt, dying." (Act 4, Scene 15)
"His legs bestride the ocean: his reared arm Crested the world." (Act 5, Scene 2)
"Madness, when actually exhibited, was dramatically useful, as Kyd had shown. It was arresting in itself, and it allowed the combination in a single figure of tragic hero and buffoon, to whom could be accorded the licence of the allowed fool in speech and action."
(Page 13, Essay: Tragedy and Madness)
"O happy horse, to bear the weight of Antony!" (Act 1, Scene 5)
"I have done my work ill, friends: O, make an end Of what I have begun." (Act 4, Scene 15)
"I am fire and air; the other elements I give to baser life." (Act 5, Scene 2)
"The excruciating indignities that attend his last hours are the price he pays for having made himself too much a man, too much a thing of emotion: for his followers an object of too piteous and reverential a love."
(Page 14, Essay: Antony's Suicide)
Jacobson argues that Antony's difficult and humiliating death is a result of his excessive emotional nature.
Antony's downfall is tied to his inability to balance his public duties with his private passions, making him an object of pity rather than respect.
This interpretation emphasizes the tragic consequences of Antony's deep emotional ties and the devotion he demands from those around him.
"I have done my work ill, friends: O make an end Of what I have begun." (Act 4, Scene 15)
"Let him that loves me, strike me dead." (Act 4, Scene 15)
"I will be a bridegroom in my death, and run into't as to a lover's bed." (Act 4, Scene 14)
"The constant changes of location (Egypt, Rome, Misenum, Syria, Athens), the contrasting evaluations of Antony's behaviour, as well as the fluctuating play of mood within the individual personality, all work to encourage an ironical comparative response, not quite detachment (because the play kindles a keen interest), but not a profound attachment of feeling either."
(Page 16, Essay: Antony and Cleopatra: The Play's Structure)
"Let Rome in Tiber melt, and the wide arch Of the ranged empire fall! Here is my space." (Act 1, Scene 1)
"I'th'East my pleasure lies." (Act 2, Scene 3)
"Eternity was in our lips and eyes." (Act 1, Scene 3)
"For Rome, Egypt represents a great waste of time while the 'business' of history is going on... From the Egyptian perspective, history itself is a 'gap of time', and Cleopatra, though growing physically older ('wrinkled deep in time'), seems to linger in Eternity."
(Page 18, Essay: Time and Timelessness in Antony and Cleopatra)
"Sleep out this great gap of time." (Act 1, Scene 5)
"The time of universal peace is near. Prove this a prosperous day, the three-nooked world Shall bear the olive freely." (Act 4, Scene 6)
"My salad days, When I was green in judgment: cold in blood, To say as I said then!" (Act 1, Scene 5)
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