Episoder
-
An introduction to the Bard
-
There are two families in Shakespeare's tragedy King Lear – Goneril, Regan and Cordelia Lear and Edmund and Edgar Gloucester –and their fathers!
-
Mangler du episoder?
-
The Love Test and the word ‘Nothing’. Lear divides his kingdom and abdicates responsibility.
-
A look at the language in the play
-
Two stories in tandem.
-
The Gloucester family storyline – Edgar and Edmund.
-
Edmund manipulates Edgar without telling a lie.
-
Shakespeare's vision of the world in King Lear is essentially pessimistic. Would you agree. Discuss the view with suitable quotation and reference. (Cog sheet! How to answer a typical exam question interrogated and analysed through introduction, body of answer and conclusion. )
-
Edmund in Act 5 Scene 3 in the camp near Dover “This speech of yours hath moved me, And shall perchance do good: but speak you on; You look as you had something more to say.” And Lear in Act 3 Scene 2 “Poor fool and knave, I have one part in my heart that's sorry yet for thee!"
-
The value of Nothing - Lear, Kent and role of The Fool as Lear's conscience
-
Cog sheet! How to answer a typical exam question interrogated and analysed by introduction, body of answer and conclusion.
-
The Journeys of Lear and Gloucester
-
Lear in Act 4 Scene 6, The Fool in Act 2 Scene 4, Goneril in Act 5 Scene 1, Lear in Act 3 Scene 2
-
The parallels in the families of King Lear and The Earl of Gloucester
-
Lear’s daughters Goneril and Regan gang up on Lear
-
Lear in Act 4 Scene 7 - I’m a Foolish fond old man … Gloucester in Act 4 Scene 1 - I have no way and therefore want no eyes …. Gloucester in Act 2 Scene 1 - My old heart is cracked, it’s cracked …. Lear in Act 4 Scene 1 - As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods …. Lear in Act 5 Scene 3 never, never, never, never, never.
-
The Storm Scene. Lear recognises ‘need” as he moves towards self-realisation.
-
In the play, King Lear moves from a position of centrality to one of loneliness and isolation. Discuss. Introduction, body of answer and conclusion. (Cog sheet!)
-
The Mock Trial. The metaphor of the Staircase
- Se mer