Macbeth

    Cards (129)

    • Macbeth symbolises the perils of ambition
    • Macbeth
      • Tragic hero, starts in a position of glory and success but falls from grace due to his unchecked ambition
    • Hamartia
      Fatal flaw of tragic heroes, Macbeth's is his unchecked ambition
    • Noble status
      Used to give Macbeth a place to fall from
    • Macbeth's journey
      • From hero to villain, from brave warrior to coward, explores gender, power, and morality
    • Macbeth's relationship with his wife
      Allows examination of gender roles, marital relations, and power in society
    • Philosophical significance of Macbeth's character
      Defined by his ambition and guilt, explores predestination and fate
    • Macbeth's life seems to be controlled by fate, but the extent to which his story was foretold or of his own making is questioned
    • Macbeth's character in context of gender
      Explores masculinity and femininity, toxic masculinity, and repressive masculinity
    • Macbeth's fear of being emasculated
      Explored through his character, associated with violence and femininity
    • Macbeth's ideals of valour, power, and violence
      Become synonymous with masculinity, driving his pursuit of kingship
    • Macbeth's relationship with Lady Macbeth

      Influences his decisions, power dynamics change as the play progresses, he allows himself to be manipulated by her
    • Macbeth's fatal flaw
      Ambition
    • Macbeth's disputed masculinity is his weakness, any challenge to his manhood can convince him to commit any crime
    • Macbeth allows himself to be manipulated by his superior
      She has the power to strip him of his masculinity
    • Ambition is Macbeth's fatal flaw
    • Disputed masculinity is Macbeth's weakness
    • Macbeth's ambition strives more to be indisputably 'manly' than to be king
    • Jacobean England was deeply religious
    • Faith is mentioned in the play full of sinners and treachery
    • Macbeth rarely mentions God by name
    • Macbeth worries about the destination of his immortal soul
    • Macbeth sacrifices eternal life in Heaven for power and status on Earth
    • Macbeth copes with turning his back on God
    • Macbeth acknowledges that Heaven will object to his plans
    • Macbeth frets that Duncan's virtues will cry out against the murder
    • Killing Duncan is a landmark decision in Macbeth's moral path
    • Killing Duncan is a conscious choice to embrace corrupt temptation
    • Macbeth has a moral crisis and an identity crisis after the murder
    • Macbeth will "sleep no more" after the murder
    • Macbeth could not "say Amen" after the murder
    • Macbeth's life as he knows it is over after the murder
    • Macbeth has strayed from God's path and lost God's protection
    • Shakespeare constructs Scotland as a godless, Hellish land after the murder
    • Macbeth's mental state mirrors the state of his kingdom
    • Living without God is suggested as the worst fate a man can have
    • Male friendships were a huge part of Jacobean culture
    • Men in Jacobean society were emotionally and psychologically attuned to each other
    • Male solidarity and loyalty were important values influenced by military standards
    • In battle, soldiers relied on each other and desertion was unthinkable
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