Wednesday, May 29, 2019
The Influence of the Supernatural in William Shakespeares Macbeth Essa
The Influence of the Supernatural in William Shakespeares Macbeth   Dramatic impact is the effect on the audience. Macbeth is a play   designed to be performed for and to involve the audience. Dramatic   influence is the way supernatural has effect upon the characters in   the play.   In Shakespeares time, most people believed in witches and witchcraft   and they were the objects of morbid and fevered fascination.   Persecution reached  fantastic proportions. Between 1560 and 1602,   hundreds of people, mostly women, were convicted as witches and were   executed. Although some voices were raised against this superstitious   and barbarous persecution, most people had believed in witched. There   were hundreds of pamphlets describing the lurid details of witchcraft   trials printed. They enjoyed  expectant and popular sales, which were the   equivalent to our popular newspapers today.   Witches were credited with diabolical powers. They could do things   like predicting the future, fly   , bring on night in daytime, cause fogs   and kill animals. They cursed enemies with  deadly wasting diseases and   induced nightmares and sterility, and could take demonic possession of   any individual they chose. Witches could raise evil spirits by   concocting a horrible brew with  nervous ingredients.   Macbeth may have been performed before King James in 1606. King James   was very keen on the topic of witches. He did many investigations of   witchcraft. A group of witched attempted to kill him once, but their   plot was discovered and was taken to trial.   There are many events in the play of Macbeth, showing much of  outstanding   impact on the audience and dramatic influence acted upon the...  ...  revenge for his family.   Shakespeare tries to create a supernatural atmosphere by the language   he uses. Certain  manner of speaking recur throughout Macbeth, creating meaning,   atmosphere and significance. For example the words, blood, fear,   and sleep. The use of words like    this repetitively, creates tension,   and a dark, spooky and dramatic atmosphere. Characters like Macbeth   and Lady Macbeth had spoken soliloquies, which reveals to the audience   their  versed thoughts and motives. Macbeth often thinks aloud, about   half his lines seem to be spoken to himself. This use of him thinking   aloud is very essential to the audience, as the audience needs the    companionship of how he feels after acting upon something. For example, he   had felt bad after killing Duncan, and he had kept killing because he   did not want to  meet what he had gained.                  
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