100% Zufriedenheitsgarantie Sofort verfügbar nach Zahlung Sowohl online als auch als PDF Du bist an nichts gebunden 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Zusammenfassung

Summary A Level English Literature King Lear Context Grid

Bewertung
-
Verkauft
-
seiten
2
Hochgeladen auf
19-12-2025
geschrieben in
2024/2025

A context summary grid of the key contexts influencing Shakespeare's 'King Lear' and key quotes that link to the contexts - good for structuring essays

Hochschule
Kurs








Ups! Dein Dokument kann gerade nicht geladen werden. Versuch es erneut oder kontaktiere den Support.

Verknüpftes buch

Schule, Studium & Fach

Studien-Niveau
Herausgeber
Fach
Kurs

Dokument Information

Gesamtes Buch?
Ja
Hochgeladen auf
19. dezember 2025
Anzahl der Seiten
2
geschrieben in
2024/2025
Typ
Zusammenfassung

Themen

Inhaltsvorschau

King Lear Context

KEY CONTEXT Relevant quote (Act & Scene?) - How link? Relevant quote (Act & Scene?) - How link?

Gunpowder Plot ‘This is the excellent foppery of the world’ - Edmund thinks he ‘Edmund the base / Shall top the legitimate’ - Edmund is ‘Co
has fooled his father and is topping the aristocratic rules and conspiring to top Edgar - the legitimate son - and subvert Pa
laws in England much like Guy Fawkes in the Gunpowder Plot aristocratic ideals that are typical of the Jacobean (and of the for
pagan setting) era

Monteagle Letter ‘Come, if it be nothing, I shall not need spectacles’ - Gloucester ‘I have received a letter this night - ‘tis dangerous to be spoken’ - ‘Yo
is reading the letter Edmund gave him and is fooled by the lies The Gunpowder Plot was a dangerous scheme much like the wa
told. A letter, like the Monteagle Letter, that propels Edmund dangerous concerns in England at the time sa
upwards but deceives Gloucester ag

The Book of Job ‘I am a man more sinned against than sinning’ - Job was forced ‘Here I stand your slave, / a poor, infirm, weak and despised old ‘Ou
to suffer because of a bet, which may be similar to how Lear man’ - Job, due to his suffering, was weak and poor, which may
feels, suffering because of something stupid and intangible rather reflect the difficulties Lear is undergoing
than someone he deserves

King James ‘Rule in this realm and the gored state sustain’ - James united ‘Then shall the realm of Albion / Come to great confusion’ - King ‘W
the kingdom and may have been thought to bring the country James was bringing the country into unification and out of un
back to prosperity from the division and darkness division and confusion

Basilikon Doron ‘To shake all cares and business from our age, ‘We have divided/ In three our kingdom’ - King James wrote ‘Th
Conferring them on younger strengths’ - The dangers of being about the dangers of dividing the country and Lear subverts this to
careless with your country and dividing it into three to give the and immediately in Act 1 Sc 1 divides the country rashly an
younger, less wise heirs the right to rule the country

1603 plague ‘Wherefore should I stand in the plague of custom’ - Edmund ‘Thou art a boil, a plague sore, an embossed carbuncle in my ‘tis
might be likening the plague to infectious aristocratic customs, corrupted blood.’ - The plague, seemingly bubonic, is corrupting, as
seeing meritocratic ideals as the cure to the sickness infectious and spreading in the 1600s sta

Harsnett’s ‘Poor naked wretches’ - Harsnett’s Declaration highlights his ‘Of Bedlam beggars, who, with roaring voices, strike in their ‘As
Declaration opinion of everything that’s wrong in the Jacobean era, and numbed and mortified bare arms’ - The poor treatment and lack sp
social injustice and poverty is at the forefront of this of compassion for the mentally ill and poor in Jacobean Britain Bri

Different Versions ‘The oldest hath borne most; we that are young / Shall never see ‘O thou’lt come no more, / Never, never, never, never, never.’ - ‘Sh
so much, nor live so long’ - The tragic, nihilistic ending of Instead of dying, Cordelia and Edgar marry and live together in Sh
Shakespeare’s Lear heavily contrasts Nahum Tate’s more Nahum Tate’s version of King Lear
positive ending to Lear

Bastardy & ‘Why they brand us/ With base? With baseness, bastardy? Base, ‘Legitimate Edgar, I must have your land.’ - Edmund wants to ‘Th
base?’ - Reflects Edmund’s frustration with his bastard status subvert primogeniture and take Edgar’s right to inherit the land his
8,45 €
Vollständigen Zugriff auf das Dokument erhalten:

100% Zufriedenheitsgarantie
Sofort verfügbar nach Zahlung
Sowohl online als auch als PDF
Du bist an nichts gebunden

Lerne den Verkäufer kennen
Seller avatar
eviegrace

Lerne den Verkäufer kennen

Seller avatar
eviegrace Royal Holloway University of London (London)
Folgen Sie müssen sich einloggen, um Studenten oder Kursen zu folgen.
Verkauft
Neu auf Stuvia
Mitglied seit
1 Jahren
Anzahl der Follower
0
Dokumente
8
Zuletzt verkauft
-

0,0

0 rezensionen

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Kürzlich von dir angesehen.

Warum sich Studierende für Stuvia entscheiden

on Mitstudent*innen erstellt, durch Bewertungen verifiziert

Geschrieben von Student*innen, die bestanden haben und bewertet von anderen, die diese Studiendokumente verwendet haben.

Nicht zufrieden? Wähle ein anderes Dokument

Kein Problem! Du kannst direkt ein anderes Dokument wählen, das besser zu dem passt, was du suchst.

Bezahle wie du möchtest, fange sofort an zu lernen

Kein Abonnement, keine Verpflichtungen. Bezahle wie gewohnt per Kreditkarte oder Sofort und lade dein PDF-Dokument sofort herunter.

Student with book image

“Gekauft, heruntergeladen und bestanden. So einfach kann es sein.”

Alisha Student

Häufig gestellte Fragen