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romeo and juliet- act 5 guided notesshakespearean conventions• shakespe…

Question

romeo and juliet- act 5 guided notesshakespearean conventions• shakespearean tragedies always consist of • shakespeare follows the same pattern of events in all of his tragedies • in , there is a death • in , there are more deaths• this is consistent in all of his tragedies • julius caesar • macbeth • hamlet • othello• in a tragedy, the must be an admirable but flawed character • do you agree that this is true for romeo and juliet?

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. Shakespearean tragedies adhere to a core structure centered around a tragic hero and escalating death tolls, with a single key death mid-play and multiple fatalities in the final act.
  2. The tragic hero is defined as an admirable figure with a fatal flaw that drives their downfall, a standard across Shakespeare's tragic works.
  3. For Romeo and Juliet, both title characters fit the tragic hero mold: they are noble-hearted but impulsive, a flaw that leads to their deaths.

Answer:

  • Shakespearean tragedies always consist of a tragic hero and a series of escalating, unavoidable deaths
  • In the middle (Act 3), there is a death
  • In the final act (Act 5), there are more deaths
  • In a tragedy, the tragic hero must be an admirable but flawed character
  • Do you agree that this is true for Romeo and Juliet? Yes. Both Romeo and Juliet are admirable (they are loyal, passionate, and sympathetic to audiences) but have a tragic flaw: impulsive, reckless decision-making (Romeo killing Tybalt, both rushing to suicide without verifying information) that leads to their downfall.