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THEMES IN MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family) Gender expectations- roles of men and women Personal transformation-personal growth, enlightenment, rebirth

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Page 1: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

THEMES IN MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHINGDeception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings

Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations

Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Gender expectations- roles of men and women

Personal transformation-personal growth, enlightenment, rebirth

Page 2: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Motifs

Recurring pattern or repeated action, element, or idea in a work of literature.

AS you read, track the following motifs:

Entertainment (spectacle, dance, music)

Expression of Grief (personal and public)

Page 3: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Motifs continued

Language and Wordplay (blank verse vs. prose, pun, double entendre, innuendo, malapropism, simile, metaphor, dramatic irony)

Noting- eavesdropping, observing, taking special notice of)

Pairing or juxtaposition of characters- (lovers, servants, brothers, villains, comics)

Page 4: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Motifs

Taming of that which is wild- (a metaphor for social taming)

Warfare- (figurative, in verbal confrontations and arguments)

Page 5: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Motifs continued

Language and Wordplay-

Noting- Take “note of” to notice something.

Pairing or juxtaposition of characters- Who ends up with who? Who is the antithesis of the other.

Page 6: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Symbols

A concrete object or place that has significance in a literary work because it communicates an idea.

Keep track of how the author develops the following symbols in Much Ado About Nothing Beards and beardlessness (especially in

reference to Benedick)

Beatrice’s heart- what does it reveal, hide etc.

Page 7: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Symbols

Dance at the double wedding- What does it represent?

Hero’s “death” and “rebirth”

Page 8: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Allusion

A figure of speech that makes reference to people, places, events, literary or artistic works, or myths, either directly or by implication.

You should be able to identify allusions in this work and with the aid of some research, describe how those allusions complement the themes and motifs in the play.

Page 9: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Allusions in Much Ado About Nothing

Cham’s beard Cupid Dian in her orb Ethiope Europa God Bel’s priests Hector Hercules Hyman

Page 10: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Allusions

Jove Leander Pharaoh’s soldiers Philemon’s roof Phoebus Pigmies Prester John’s foot Saint Peter Troilus

Page 11: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Allusions

Venus Vulcan

Page 12: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

PlotExpositon

The introduction to the situation and the characters when the play opens.

Page 13: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Rising Action

The “tangling” of the plot; setting up of conflicts; complications

Page 14: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Climax

The turning point between the rising action and the falling action

Page 15: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Falling Action

The unwinding of the plot toward its conclusion

Page 16: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Conclusion

The denouement or ending; the final scene, in which the main conflict is resolved and order and stability are finally restored.

Page 17: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Dramatic Techniques

Author’s use them to convey their intent to the audience or reader.

Track the following through out this play:

Antithesis- a figure of speech in which sharply contrasting ideas are juxtaposed in parallel phrases or grammatical structures.

Page 18: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Dramatic Techniques

Dramatic irony- creating a specific scene on stage, when the audience knows something one (or more) of the characters does not know as the scene plays out.

Page 19: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Dramatic Tecniques

Pun- a form or wordplay that suggests two or more meanings by exploiting multiple meanings of words, or similarly sounding words, for an intended rhetorical or humorous effect.

Page 20: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Poetic Techniques

Iambic Pentameter- a pattern of rhythm; a line of poetry written in iambic pentameter is composed of five iambs, or “feet”; each iamb is made up of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllabe.

Page 21: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Poetic Techniques

Blank Verse- unrhymed iambic pentameter. In Much Ado About Nothing, characters reflect moments of high drama or of more intense emotion through blank verse.

Page 22: Deception-trickery, concealment of one’s feelings Honor verses Shame-humiliation, violation of social expectations Love- Romantic and Filial (Duty to family)

Poetic Techniques

Prose- writing without a regular poetic meter. In Much Ado About Nothing, characters speak in prose most of the time (with exceptions noted above under blank verse)