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Summary English Literature A level Edexcel - KING LEAR CONTEXT

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Explore the literary aspects of tragedy and the evolution of the tragic hero, informed by Aristotle's principles, alongside real-life inspirations such as Sir William Allen’s familial conflict. Analyze the historical backdrop of the Jacobean era, marked by political unrest, issues of succession, and the social hierarchy that shapes character interactions and societal commentary. Delve into themes of madness and the divine right of kings, exploring how Lear's decisions lead to chaos and disorder. These notes also cover the psychological context of the characters' relationships, the role of women in a patriarchal society, and the impact of individual biographies, such as Grace Wildgoose’s attempt to declare her father insane. This resource is essential for gaining a nuanced perspective on the complex themes, character dynamics, and societal influences that inform Shakespeare’s tragedy, making it invaluable for exam preparation and critical analysis.

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Uploaded on
October 4, 2024
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Written in
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Summary

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KING LEAR - Context


LITERARY: HISTORICAL:
● Tragic heroes appear all over important ● Set in 800 BC, allowing Shakespeare to say
literary works. Many writers at the time had what he wishes about religion, he wrote
different notions of tragedy and a tragic extensively about Kingship.
hero
● Aristotle's strict definition for what makes ● Shakespeare wrote "King Lear'' in the early
a tragic hero has changed. 17th century, during the Jacobean era. This
● The ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle was a time of political unrest and uncertainty in
was the first to define a "tragic hero." He England, with issues of succession, familial
believed that a good tragedy must evoke betrayal
feelings of ‘fear and pity’ in the audience,
since he saw these two emotions as being ● Elizabethan society was a highly hierarchical
fundamental to the experience of catharsis society in which a lot of respect was to be paid
(the process of releasing strong or pent-up to those wealthy, parents, and elderly.
emotions through art). Shakespeare may use this as social
commentary on how fragile the Elizabethan
The modern tragic hero: society was- as his elderly and parental figures
- Can be all types of genders, characters, (Lear and Gloucester) are those treated the
backgrounds worst.
- Can be the characters that don't usually fit
the conventional notion of a tragic hero ● Ideas around Madness
"Lunatics" only started being properly confined
to institutions in the 1800s- earlier generations
Inspiration of story- real life- Sir William Allen may have seen it as part of human condition-
Sir William Allen divided property between 3 people would have seen madmen roaming
daughters and he thought to stay with one of his around early villages.
daughters and ended disastrously by being - Insanity was poorly understood and
treated badly by all. Contrasts to the way Cordelia often associated with demonic
treated Lear. possession or punishment from God.

● The storm may be a physical ● Divine Right Of Kings:
representation In Jacobean society the monarch was seen to
of a liminal state of purgatory. be appointed by god. Lear decisions thus
Purgatory, in Christian theology, is often would be seen as unnatural and hubris filled
depicted as a state of purification and leading up to chaos.
transition, where souls undergo suffering
and penance before reaching a state of ● Great Chain Of being: a strict, religious
spiritual redemption. Similarly, the storm hierarchical structure of all matter and life,
in "King Lear" can be seen as a liminal believed to have been decreed by God.
state of purgatory, where the characters - Causes disruption in order. Lear
confront their sins, face the consequences splitting up his kingdom and giving it
of their actions, and undergo a process of away to his daughters reflects him
moral and spiritual transformation. relinquishing his authority and power.
As a result there is disruption to natural
order causing chaos. E.g Lear's mental
decline and insanity
● Fools were normally kept around to be laughed
at for their mental disabilities, while Jesters
were storytellers and singers in. in king lear,
the fool ultimately seems wise - directs lear
through his mental decline and advices him

● Primogeniture, a traditional method of passing
on wealth and property. Primogeniture meant
that the first-born son inherited the family
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