What Renaissance ideas did Shakespeare's work address?
he went from the religious renaissance values to the humanist medieval values
Shakespeare lived in the time of the Renaissance. During the Renaissance, women could be glovers, butchers, leather-workers, goldsmiths, iron-mongers, cutlers, and wool merchants. Sometimes, if a craftsman died, his wife could either take his place in business or help to watch over it. So, yes, women did work.
Shakespeare did his work in London to keep William Shakespeare alive.
The sport most alluded to in Shakespeare's work is bowls. Shakespeare was a bowler.
What Renaissance ideas did Shakespeare's work address?
he went from the religious renaissance values to the humanist medieval values
what are two ways in which shakespeare's work showed renaissance influences
"Consonance" is not a work by William Shakespeare. However, Shakespeare is known for his plays, sonnets, and other poetic works that explore themes of love, power, and human nature.
William Shakespeare affected the Renaissance in several ways. The Renaissance is a period of rebirth in science, art, and literature. By writing many plays, Shakespeare contributed to most of the rebirth of literature. Plays by Shakespeare are extremely well known, even today, and assist historians in discovery of the past. He wrote many plays and poems, such as Romeo and Juliet and A Midsummer's Dream.
Machiavelli challenged the Renaissance ideal of a hero by promoting the idea of a ruler who prioritized power and practicality over traditional virtues like honor and morality. His work "The Prince" advocated for political realism and emphasized the importance of cunning and ruthlessness in leadership, which went against the idealized image of a noble and virtuous ruler that was prevalent during the Renaissance.
Two secular writers of the Renaissance were Niccolò Machiavelli, known for his political treatise "The Prince," and Michel de Montaigne, known for popularizing the essay as a literary genre with his work "Essays."
Shakespeare's work might not be considered to be classic because one has a peculiar definition of the word "classic". If your definition of "classic" is that it was produced by the ancient Romans and Greeks sometime before 400 AD., then Shakespeare does not fit.
Shakespeare lived in the time of the Renaissance. During the Renaissance, women could be glovers, butchers, leather-workers, goldsmiths, iron-mongers, cutlers, and wool merchants. Sometimes, if a craftsman died, his wife could either take his place in business or help to watch over it. So, yes, women did work.
Shakespeare did his work in London to keep William Shakespeare alive.
Shakespeare's plays are all about questioning authority: kings are deposed; bad people (Iago) triump over good ones (Cassio); your parents don't always know best (the behaviour of the parents in Romeo and Juliet is the cause of all the trouble). In the Middle Ages people had a general sense that God was in his heaven, and all was right with the world. In the Renaissance people started to ask if that was true. Shakespeare is always asking difficult questions, which is a very Renaissance thing to do. And he never makes any direct reference to Christian faith in any of his plays:- religious doubt was also a very Renaissance characteristic.
Shakespeare's plays are all about questioning authority: kings are deposed; bad people (Iago) triump over good ones (Cassio); your parents don't always know best (the behaviour of the parents in Romeo and Juliet is the cause of all the trouble). In the Middle Ages people had a general sense that God was in his heaven, and all was right with the world. In the Renaissance people started to ask if that was true. Shakespeare is always asking difficult questions, which is a very Renaissance thing to do. And he never makes any direct reference to Christian faith in any of his plays:- religious doubt was also a very Renaissance characteristic.