13 Results for comedy

Humanities/Greco-Roman Culture Lysistrata Aristophanes was a "craft" comedy poet in the fourth century B.C. during the time of the Peloponnesian War. Aristophanes' usual style was to be too satirical, and suggesting the outlandish. He shows little mercy when mocking Socrates and his "new-f...
Two obstinate and powerful women, Medea and Lysistrata, accomplish their goals with different methods but with the same intention; of love and happiness. Medea is a woman in Euripides' tragedy, who is driven mad by her anger towards her husband whom she had given so much for. Lysistrata is a wo...
William Shakespeare must have been endlessly fascinated by the relationships between men and women. The Bard's most popular plays dealt with the male and female dynamic, which were often played for laughs in satirical comedies, like Much Ado About Nothing. The play's action and conflict revolved aro...
In his play Lysistrata, Aristophanes uses typical old comedy to poke fun at war, male chauvinism and the symbolism of sex to get his point across. We feel that it was necessary for him to have the female characters withhold sex in this play in order to get the men to listen for a few reasons. Fir...
English Coursework - Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night' Concealment and disguise are the driving forces behind the dark comedy that is 'Twelfth Night'. The character Viola decides to adopt the disguise of a man, which has serious consequences for herself and others around he...
For many years, advertisements have been displayed on television, buses, in magazines, and virtually everywhere, you go. These advertisements are seen by billions of people each day and are meant to sell some kind of service or product. However, in today's society these advertisements do more t...
WOMEN IN SOCIETY IN HENRICK IBSEN\'S \" A DOLL\'S HOUSE \" Henrik Ibsen was born in 1828 at Skien in Norway. He was from a wealthy family who soon after his birth lost their money. Ibsen worked as a pharmacist\'s apprentice, but at the age of twenty-two he had written his first play, a pro...
In her novel, Domestic Manners of the Americans, Fanny Trollope makes a bold statement on the affairs of the new found country and its inhabitants. Of particular distaste to the author was the spectacle of evangelical religious practices. She made much, throughout her writing, over the role that the...
There is literally and epidemic which has spread around the world over the past thirty years or so. This is a health problem, both physical and mental, that isn't caused by an elusive bacteria or a yet unnamed virus. This health problem is caused by greed. The corporate greed of big business...
The sociopolitical climate of Shaw's England appears to have offered the playwright the subject of his conflict. In his 1895 essay on the problem play, Shaw states the primacy of social issues in modern drama, expressing himself in dramatic rather than directly sociopolitical terms. One cr...
Geoffrey Chaucer demonstrates his skill as a writer with his \"Wife of Bath\'s Prologue\" in many ways. It is easy to lose ourselves in the character of the Wife of Bath because she is colorful and by reading her prologue, we feel as though we almost know her. Her unique qualities cause her to sta...
From the role of the cunning seductress, to the obedient housewife, to the raging feminist, women were a focal point of Ancient Greek society. Although they were denied citizenship and held no political voice, the roles they played in their culture were undeniably important. They functioned as the g...
Shakespearean SalvationMatters of the heart are what matter to Shakespeare. He has an unconventional woman fall in love in an unconventional way in Taming of The Shrew as well as in Twelfth Night. Olivia, Katherina, Viola, and Bianca; each and every one are courted in an unconventional ways and in a...