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Shakespeare was not trying to warn Caesar who died 16 centuries before he was born. Are you asking what the dramatic effect is of the warning Caesar receives from the soothsayer and from Calpurnia? Dramatically, Caesar's reaction to the warnings may show him to be conceited and arrogant (or confident and level-headed, if you like him).
There is no "audience" in the play Merchant of Venice, unlike Hamlet or A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Don't believe in your destiny because you don't know what will happen in your future.
Shakespeare is a famous writer who wrote many famous plays, probably his most famous being Romeo and Juliet. Romeo and Juliet is about a couple who fall in love and get married, despite their families feud which has been going on for generations. Shakespeare cleverly didn't write what the feud was about, because it helps get his theme of unresolved conflict leads to tragedy across. Shakespeare also uses fate as a theme and gets this across by writing that fate conspires against them; 'star-crossed lovers.' This fate conspires so much against Romeo and Juliet that it is unrealistic to a modern day (contemporary) audience, but in a Shakespearean audience it didn't matter because as long as it was entertaining it was accepted. This essay is about the reaction of a Shakespearean audience and a contemporary audience would have towards Romeo throughout the play. Throughout Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare presents Romeo as a young man overcoming his adolescence. Romeo... ... middle of paper ... ...pinions on the reactions of Romeo throughout the essay may be completely different to what the majority of Shakespearean and contemporary audiences, because the two different audiences would react depending upon the individuals in the audiences. Shakespeare's themes of 'unresolved conflict leads to tragedy' and 'fate' are got across to us because of all the unrealistic bad luck Romeo and Juliet have. Due to the conflict, Mercutio, Tybalt, Paris, Romeo and Juliet are all dead, as the Prince says; 'all are punished.'
Audience reaction to the media does not need to be considered. It is not an essential part of the visual media itself.
The final scene in the tomb is an example of dramatic irony because the audience knows that Juliet is not truly dead, but Romeo believes she is. We know that Juliet has taken a potion to fake her death, but Romeo is unaware of this and believes she has died. This creates tension and dramatic irony as the audience watches Romeo's tragic reaction unfold.
For a paragraph, we'd need to add in audience reaction to predict what a modern and contempary audience may be feeling as they read/watch this.
Applause is the emotional reaction of an audience, or any expression of approval created by noise
The possessive form is audience's. Example:The audience's reaction was a lot clapping and cheering.
The correct spelling of the singular noun is audience (one audience).The correct singular possessive form is audience's.Example: The audience's reaction made the singer smile.
Shakespeare was not trying to warn Caesar who died 16 centuries before he was born. Are you asking what the dramatic effect is of the warning Caesar receives from the soothsayer and from Calpurnia? Dramatically, Caesar's reaction to the warnings may show him to be conceited and arrogant (or confident and level-headed, if you like him).
There is no useful or note-able reaction from these two elements because they don't create a dramatic reaction. Their a neutral reaction/ has no reaction.
Kary Mullis
polymerase chain reaction
The correct singular possessive nouns are:audience's reaction (the reaction of one audience)king's rights (the rights of a king)
There is no "audience" in the play Merchant of Venice, unlike Hamlet or A Midsummer Night's Dream.
i do not really know so u asking the wrong person