Monday, September 2, 2019
The Power of Shakespeares The Winters Tale :: Shakespeare Winters Tale Essays
The Power of The Winter's Tale     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Many  of Shakespeare's later plays broke with customs of genre. The Merchant of Venice  has all the elements of a comedy, but deals with very grave matters and ends  ambiguously. Pericles foreshadows the novel in its romantic plot and use of  narration. Such plays challenged prevalent Renaissance literary theory which  demanded fairly strict adherence to classical values of realism and unity. The  Winter's Tale is a self-conscious violation of these expectations, and a jibe at  the assumptions behind them. Shakespeare uses the play itself to present his  argument against what may be termed, "the mimetic theory of art." It was the  established opinion of Elizabethan literati that art ought to imitate life  (Kiernan 8). Shakespeare not only rejects this "ought,"1[1] but shows the  absurdity of what it entails.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The categories available to a dramatist are  laid out by young Mamillius when he is asked to tell a tale, "Merry or sad  shall't be?" (II.i.22). The dramatist is presented with the options of tragedy  or comedy. This bifurcation is repeated throughout the play, which itself is  cleft in two between a predominately tragic section and a predominantly comical  pastoral section. For this act, tragedy is chosen, "A sad tale's best for  winter," (24) and the story begins, "There was a man... dwelt by the churchyard"  (28-29). Here is where the play's self-consciousness starts to appear. It is the  play which is a sad tale about a man who dwells by the churchyard, namely  Leontes, who mourns at the grave of the wife and son he damned. It is also at  this moment that the tragedy of the play begins, when Mamillius' tale is  interrupted by the arrival of Leontes to accuse Hermione of adultery.      Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The tragedy progresses to a climax by Act III,  Scene iii, when Antigonus arrives on Bohemia's shore. This is the execution of  Leontes' greatest sin, his rejection of his daughter. This is also the point at  which the mood of the drama turns to comedy. The segue from the Sicilian tragedy  to the Bohemian comedy comes in the form of a bear. Prior to his departure for  Bohemia, Antigonus refers to bears in the context of folktales, "wolves and  bears, they say, / Casting their savageness aside, have done / Like offices of  pity" (II.  					    
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