Nothing is quite as it seems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Nothing is quite as it seems

Description:

Nothing is quite as it seems When darkness falls upon thy dreams Fair is foul, and foul is fair When evil looms within the air As dark hearts, produce dark ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:48
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: classroomL5
Category:
Tags: nothing | quite | seems

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Nothing is quite as it seems


1
(No Transcript)
2
  • Nothing is quite as it seems
  • When darkness falls upon thy dreams
  • Fair is foul, and foul is fair
  • When evil looms within the air
  • As dark hearts, produce dark thoughts
  • While those do, not as they ought
  • Sins of our fathers and mothers abound
  • As evil sits beneath the crown
  • -Wilson

3
MACBETH
  • By William Shakespeare
  • First written between 1611-12
  • First performed in 1623.

4
Plotline
  • The play Macbeth tells of a man who is deceived
    by himself and his wife.
  • Basically, there are three witches who predict
    Macbeth's future it then plays on his mind when
    the first prediction comes true--he becomes Thane
    of Cawdor. From there he would go on to be king.
    He writes and tells his wife and they were both
    really excited. When Macbeth gets back to his
    castle, he and his wife decide that the only way
    he can become king is if they kill King Duncan.
    With power gone to his head, Macbeth slowly
    starts to 'lose the plot', as does Lady Macbeth.
  • Macbeth captures the timeless nature of the human
    experience....There is greed for power, murderous
    evil scheming, and the nobility of the fight for
    good and evil. The tortuous guilty
    self-flagellation that Macbeth and Lady Macbeth
    succumb to is such a base human emotion. Without
    realizing it they are both lost in the depth of
    the abyss they willingly stepped into. Those are
    elements of "a classic" and of course no one
    questions that Shakespeare's Macbeth, written in
    1606, still plays well today.

5
Foreshadowed
  • The play opens with thunder and lightning and
    the appearance of three witches(supernatural
    beings). This foreshadows the central theme of
    the playEVIL!

6
MACBETHCHARACTERS
7
DUNCAN, King of Scotland
  • He is king at the beginning of the play.
  • Duncan is a good king who his people like. By no
    fault of his own he is unable to discern those
    who threaten his reign.

8
MACBETH
  • Becomes King after killing King Duncan
  • Macbeth is a Scottish general and the thane of
    Glamis who is led to wicked thoughts by the
    prophecies of the three witches, especially after
    their prophecy that he will be made thane of
    Cawdor comes true. Macbeth is a brave soldier and
    a powerful man, but he is not a virtuous one. He
    is easily tempted into murder to fulfill his
    ambitions to the throne, and once he commits his
    first crime and is crowned king of Scotland, he
    embarks on further atrocities with increasing
    ease. Ultimately, Macbeth proves himself better
    suited to the battlefield than to political
    intrigue, because he lacks the skills necessary
    to rule without being a tyrant. His response to
    every problem is violence and murder. Unlike
    Shakespeares great villains, such as Iago in
    Othello and Richard III in Richard III, Macbeth
    is never comfortable in his role as a criminal.
    He is unable to bear the psychological
    consequences of his atrocities.

9
LADY MACBETH Just plain evil!
  • Lady Macbeth is a good wife who loves her
    husband. She is also ambitious but lacks the
    morals of her husband. To achieve her ambition,
    she rids herself of any kindness that might stand
    in the way. However, she runs out of energy to
    suppress her conscience which leads to her
    demise.

10
BANQUO
  • BANQUO, Thane of Lochaber, a general in the
    King's army
  • Banquo serves as a foil to Macbeth, showing an
    alternate react to prophecy. Banquo retains his
    morals and allegiances, but ends up dying. He is
    brave and ambitious, but this is tempered by
    intelligence.

11
MACDUFF
  • MACDUFF, Thane of Fife, a nobleman of Scotland
  • Macduff shows early on a distrust of Macbeth. He
    also represents fate as when knocking on the
    door. He thinks he can avoid having his family
    looking guilty and getting killed by fleeing, but
    he underestimates Macbeth. Macduff then plays the
    avenger.

12
MALCOLM
  • King after Macbeth
  • MALCOLM, elder son of Duncan
  • Malcolm, as a good king, is everything that
    Macbeth is not. He uses deception only to insure
    his personal safety.

13
DONALBAIN
  • DONALBAIN, younger son of Duncan
  • Donalbain is Duncan's youngest son and flees to
    Ireland when his father is murdered.

LENNOX
LENNOX, nobleman of Scotland Lennox is one of
Duncan's nobles and he is largely an observer in
the play. He grows suspicious of what he sees in
Macbeth, and grows increasingly sarcastic and is
fearful for the fate of Scotland. Lennox plays
both sides, and probably others do as well.
14
ROSS
  • ROSS, nobleman of Scotland
  • Ross is Macduff's cousin. He acts as a messenger
    in the play, bringing good news of Macbeth's
    military victory and bad news about Macduff's
    family.
  • Ross may have left Macduff's castle to "maintain
    plausible deniability" just before the arrival of
    assassins, who he may have brought.

15
SIWARD
  • SIWARD, Earl of Northumberland, general of the
    English forces
  • Old Siward is the Earl of Northumberland and an
    ally of Malcolm and Macduff.

YOUNG SIWARD
Young Siward is Siward's son. He is slain by
Macbeth in hand-to-hand combat.
16
SEYTON
  • SEYTON, attendant to Macbeth
  • Seyton is Macbeth's lieutenant.

HECATE
Hecate is sometimes referred to as the queen of
the witches. It is she who directs supernatural
happenings and appearances of the mystical
apparitions.
17
THE THREE WITCHES
  • The three witches add an element of supernatural
    and prophecy to the play. They each have a
    familiar, such as Graymalkin and Paddock, and are
    commanded by Hecate, a Greek goddess of the moon
    and later witchcraft. The witches are based on a
    variety of ideas about witches at the time. They
    can use sieves as boats, and they can assume the
    shape of an animal, but with a defect, as with
    the tailless rat. The witches were also thought
    to be able to control the winds. They are
    described as having beards but looking human.

18
THE PORTER
  • The Porter is the keeper of Macbeth's castle who
    imagines that he is the keeper of Hell's Gate.

FLEANCE
Banquo's son Fleance plays no large role, and
the only question is how his line ends up
becoming king after Malcolm.
19
LADY MACDUFF
  • Lady Macduff represents all the good people
    slaughtered by Macbeth. She loves her family, and
    is distressed at her husband's departure. She
    doesn't really believe her husband is a traitor
    and is concerned only that he is safe when the
    murderers arrive.

20
MENTHEITH,ANGUSCAITHNESS
  • Noblemen of Scotland

21
LESSER CHARACTERS
  • An English Doctor,
  • A Scottish Doctor,
  • A Sergeant, An Old Man,
  • The Ghost of Banquo
  • Other Apparitions,
  • Lords,
  • Gentlemen,
  • Officers,
  • Soldiers,
  • Murderers,
  • Attendants,
  • Messengers

22
THEME
  • The theme of the play, according to G.R. Elliot
    is that a "wicked intention must in the end
    produce wicked action unless it is not merely
    revoked by the protagonist's better feelings, but
    entirely eradicated by his inmost will, aided by
    Divine grace." This is seen most clearly in Act
    V, Scene 1, where the Doctor says, "More needs
    she the divine than the physician." It also seen
    throughout the play in Macbeth's murderous plots.
  • Also rampant through the play is the idea of
    "Fair is foul, foul is fair." Basically, this
    means that appearances can be deceiving. What
    appears to be good can be bad, and this is seen
    in such things as the deceptive facade of Lady
    Macbeth and in the predictions of the witches.
  • The play Has a variety of underlying motifs,
    such as the supernatural, the temptation of evil.

23
WARNING!!
  • Macbeth is supposed to upset people. It shows
    life at its most brutal and cynical, in order to
    ask life's toughest question.
  • This Is NOT "Family Entertainment."
  • When we first hear of Macbeth, he has just cut an
    enemy open ("unseamed") from belly button
    ("nave") to throat ("chops").
  • At their party, a witch shows her friends the
    chopped-off thumb of a ship's pilot wrecked on
    his way home.
  • A witch who's angry with a lady plans to get back
    at her by causing a nine-day storm to make her
    sailor husband miserable. If the ship hadn't been
    under divine protection, she'd kill everybody on
    board.
  • Another witch offers to help with a bit of
    magical wind. The angry witch appreciates this
    and says, "You're such a nice person."
  • Lady Macbeth, soliloquizing, prays to devils to
    possess her mind, turn the milk in her breasts
    into bile, and give her a man's ability to do
    evil!

24
WARNING!!
  • Lady Macbeth gripes at her husband and ridicules
    his masculinity in order to make him commit
    murder.
  • She talks about a smiling baby she once nursed
    and what it would have been like to smash its
    brains out -- she would prefer this to having a
    husband who is unwilling to kill in cold blood.
  • Lady Macbeth keeps a strong sedative in the
    house. She doesn't mention this to her husband
    even when they are planning a murder. She just
    uses it. Attentive readers will suspect she has
    had to use on Macbeth in the past.
  • The Macbeths murder a sleeping man, their
    benefactor and guest, in cold blood, then
    launders their bloody clothes. They smear blood
    on the drugged guards, then slaughter them to
    complete the frame-up
  • .
  • Horses go insane and devour each others' meat
    while they are still alive.
  • Everybody knows Macbeth murdered Duncan, but they
    make him king anyway.

25
WARNING!!
  • Macbeth sees Banquo's ghost with twenty skull
    injuries, any one of which could be fatal. He
    goes psychiatric and screams "You can't prove I
    did it." He goes on about how he used to think
    that once somebody's brains were out, he'd stay
    dead. But now he'll need to keep people unburied
    until the crows eat the corpse like roadkill,
    etc.,
  • Witches deliver incantations ("Double, double,
    toil and trouble... bubble etc.") that can stand
    alongside any meaningless-inferential heavy-metal
    rock lyrics.
  • Among the ingredients of a witches' brew are
    cut-off human lips and a baby's finger. It's not
    just any baby -- it was a child delivered by a
    prostitute in a ditch, and that she strangled
    right afterwards. (This kind of thing happens in
    our era, too. No one knows how often.)

26
THE GROSS STUFF
  • For my final in Shakespearian Theory in college
    I talked to an autopsy pathologist. He was very
    familiar with how human bodies decompose. To show
    Macbeth his future, the witches add to the brew
    "grease that's sweated from the murderer's
    gibbet." Would you like to know what that means?
    The bodies of executed murderers were left
    hanging on the gallows / gibbet, often caged so
    their friends couldn't take them away, until they
    were skeletonized, a process that takes weeks. At
    about ten days in suitable weather, there are
    enough weak points in the skin that the body fat,
    which has liquefied, can start dripping through.
    There will be a puddle of oil underneath the
    body. This is for real!
  • Macduff's precocious little son jokes with his
    mother about how there are more bad than good
    people in the world, and adds some wisecracks at
    the expense of her own possible morals. Moments
    later, the bad guys break in and stab him to
    death.

27
THE GROSS STUFF
  • "Who would have thought the old man would have
    so much blood in him?" Lady Macbeth goes
    psychiatric (definitely) and commits suicide
    (maybe). Hearing of this, Macbeth just says "She
    should have died hereafter", meaning "She should
    have picked a different time to die." He then
    launches into English literature's most famous
    statement of the meaninglessness of life. He
    considers suicide, which the Romans considered
    the dignified thing to do under such
    circumstances. But he decides it would be more
    satisfying to take as many people as possible
    with him. For the word "juggling", see I Henry VI
    5.iv.
  • Macduff recounts how he was cut out of his
    mother's uterus at the moment of her death.
  • Macbeth's head ends up on a stick. All teens
    know that severed heads were probably the first
    soccer balls. If you are directing the play, this
    is a nice touch.

28
Story Details
  • Lady Macbeth's lie 'What, in our house?' would
    have given the game away to even the stupidest
    detective, but somehow no-one picks up on it.
  • If you're here, you already know the plot of
    Macbeth, or can find it. Here are some things to
    notice
  • The three witches remind English teachers of the
    three Fates of Greek mythology and the three
    Norns of Norse mythology.
  • "Weird" (as in "weird sisters") used to mean
    "destiny" or "fate". Perhaps in an older version
    they were.
  • At the beginning, Duncan I is not leading his
    army. This is a good way for a king to get
    himself replaced quickly.

29
Story Details
  • Nothing is what it seems.
  • Notice that on the morning of the day Banquo
    gets murdered, Macbeth asks him three times where
    he is going and whether his son will be with him.
    Banquo should have been more suspicious.
  • Most (all?) of the actual murders occur
    off-stage, since without any between-act
    curtains, the story had to be written so that
    somebody would remove a dead body from the stage.

30
ARE YOU MAN ENOUGH?
  • As you go through the play, look for the
    repeated theme of "What is a real man?" Like
    nowadays, there is no consensus.
  • Siward's son becomes a man in his father's eyes
    the day he falls in battle
  • Malcolm tells Macduff to bear his sorrow like a
    man. Macduff replies he must also feel it like a
    man.
  • Macbeth, having second thoughts, tells his wife
    that it's unmanly to murder your benefactor while
    he is asleep. Lady Macbeth gets abusive and tells
    him this will make him more of a man.
  • Lady Macbeth wants to lose her femininity so she
    can be cold-blooded and commit murder like a man
    does.
  • Macbeth flatters his wife, saying she has such
    "undaunted mettle" that she shouldnt have any
    baby girls, only baby boys.
  • Macbeth, perhaps having learned from his wife,
    gets two men to commit his murder by insulting
    their masculinity.

31
Q with no A
  • Fair is foul and foul is fair. In Macbeth,
    things are seldom what they seem, and we often
    don't know what's really happening. The play is
    full of ambiguity and double meanings, starting
    with the prophecies of the witches.
  • The day is extremely foul (weather) and extremely
    fair (MacDonald has been disemboweled).
  • Banquo is not so happy, yet much happier.
  • Is the dagger a hallucination, or a supernatural
    phantom?
  • Ask the same question about Banquo's ghost.
  • Does the bell summon Duncan "to heaven or to
    hell"? One of Duncan's son's called out "Murder!"
    in his sleep, but the other one laughed,
    mysteriously pleased at his father's death. Which
    was which?
  • Does Macbeth say "Had I but died an hour...."
    because he is really sorry (i.e., sad about his
    moral deterioration and/or realizing he's getting
    himself into trouble), or just overacting?
  • Does Lady Macbeth really faint? ("Perhaps she is
    actually a person of more sensitive feelings than
    she lets on.") Or does she simply pretend to
    faint to divert attention from her husband's
    overacting?
  • Who's the third murderer? - Is Ross playing both
    sides?
  • Does Lady Macbeth commit suicide or die of
    cardiac complications?

32
Down to the point-
  • THE KEY QUESTION - Is human society fundamentally
    amoral, dog-eat-dog? If so, then Macbeth is
    right, and human life itself is meaningless and
    tiresome.
  • Or do the hints of a better life such as King
    Edward's ministry, Malcolm's clean living, the
    dignified death of the contrite traitor, and the
    doctor's prescription for pastoral care, display
    Shakespeare's Christianity and/or humanism?
  • It's a dark play. The light of goodness seems
    still fairly dim. But evil always appeals more to
    the imagination, while in real life, good is much
    more genuine.
  • Is the message of Macbeth one of despair, or of
    hope?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com