reason (angels) and instils (beast) - Lear loses mental faculty, position comes closest to beast echoed in storm - most of his reason comes from madness, sees detriment his tragic decision has caused
place in Jacobean society
Cordelia defies expectation of women to remain silent and obedient leading to Lear's rage - Edmund challenges laws and appeals to nature to provide reason why he should be regarded as base in society - rise of the middle class and commercial class (wealth not from land but education)
Women
expected to obey and serve fathers and husbands, Gonerill and Regan seen as evil in Jacobean audience, little respect for their father - may reflect queen Elizabeths challenges as monarch, society diminishes because of her gender although she was a highly influential ruler - women usually died in childbirth, absence of mothers may reflect this
Superstition
witches, demons and devils, astrology highly relevant, allowed to people to question misfortunes in society, influenced human events - wheel of fortune, those at the top knew they wouldn't stay there forever, Edmund 'the wheel hath come full circle'
Gunpowder plot
Christians tried to eradicate the royal family and parliament by blowing up the Houses of Parliament, some related to Shakespeare - King Lear wrote a year after - play echoes dangerous and uncertain times
performance
Cordelia and the fool played by the same actor
Brain Annesley
His 2 eldest daughters attempted to get him classed as certified insane so they could take over his estate - youngest daughter (Cordell) protested and stopped this from happening
King James
on the thrown when the play was written and shown, England, Wales and Scotland unified - James' obsession with unification, tension between himself and parliament, Shakespeare plays on idea of catastrophic division of a country
Divine rights of the King
Kings hold divine powers appointed by the Gods - Lear embodies natural authority and order of the king (believable to Jacobean audiences) - disassociates himself with divine obligation leading to shocked audience - perhaps Lear's suffering is a divine force
Great chain of being
feudal hierarchal structure - hierarchal structure of all life - Lear goes against structures - subverts natural order - Jacobean audiences seen as decreed by God - suffering may be a consequence of defiance and disregard of divine appointment - God, angels, humans
Illegitimacy
Queen Elizabeth's legitimacy questioned, father Henry VIII many marital relations - echoed in Edmund and Edgar, Edmund challenges fate that has been dealt by law not nature (puts himself before his brother)