King Lear | Themes
Since it was first staged and published in the early seventeenth century, Shakespeare's King Lear has been the subject of extensive literary interpretation and the object of intense critical debate. The key issue here is whether King Lear is a classical tragedy with a redemptive moral or a radical departure from genre conventions, a play with a profoundly pessimistic, even nihilistic, view of man and the world he briefly inhabits. At the center of the division between the traditional and the modern readings of Shakespeare's Lear is the subject and theme of nature, human...
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- King Lear: Introduction
- William Shakespeare Biography
- Reading Shakespeare
- List of Characters
- Historical Background
- Summary
- Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 5: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scenes 2 and 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 5: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 6: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 7: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 5: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 6: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 7: Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scenes 1 and 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Quizzes
- Act I, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 5: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scenes 2 and 3: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 5: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 6: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 7: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 4: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 5: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 6: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 7: Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scenes 1 and 2: Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Themes
- Character Analysis
- Principal Topics
- Essays
- Is Lear a Tragic Hero?
- The Power of Language and the Language of Power in King Lear
- King Lear and Comedy
- A Brief Critical History of King Lear
- King Lear: Saints and Sinners
- The Tragic Ending of King Lear
- Good and Evil Children in King Lear and Henry IV
- Textual and Contextual Analysis of the Opening Scene in Shakespeare's King Lear
- Contrast in Character in The Tragedy of King Lear
- Kingship and the Themes of Shakespeare's Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth
- Madness in King Lear
- Two Critical Episodes in Shakespeare's King Lear
- Criticism
- Selected Quotes
- Suggested Essay Topics
- Sample Essay Outlines
- Modern Connections
- Pictures
- Lear and Cordelia in Russian-language film adaptation (1970)
- The Doctor, Cordelia, Lear, and Kent (Act IV, scene viii)
- Lear, Kent, the Fool, Edgar, and Gloucester
- King Lear as played by Edwin Forrest (1816)
- Lear and the Fool in National Theatre production (1990)
- The Fool
- Lear, his daughters, Edmund, Albany, Edgar, Kent, and soldiers (Act V, scene iii)
- Illustration: King Lear, Goneril, Regan, and Cordelia
- Illustration: Cordelia, The King of France, Regan, and Goneril
- Illustration: Earl of Gloucester
- Illustration: King Lear and The Fool
- Illustration: King Lear, The Fool, and Kent
- Illustration: Kent
- Illustration: King Lear and Regan
- Illustration: King Lear, Kent and The Fool
- Illustration: Gloucester and Regan
- Illustration: Gloucester and Regan
- Illustration: Cordelia and the Doctor
- Illustration: Edgar and Gloucester
- Illustration: Lear and Gloucester
- Illustration: Edgar and Edmund
- Illustration: Lear and Cordelia
- Illustration: Edgar and Gloucester
- Illustration: Edmond, Lear, and Cordelia
- Illustration: Lear and Cordelia
- Illustration: Albany, Kent, and Edgar
- FAQs
- Bibliography and Further Reading
- Copyright
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