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AQA GCSE English Literature Shakespearean Text Macbeth Grade 9 Key Points & Analysis €11,29   In winkelwagen

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AQA GCSE English Literature Shakespearean Text Macbeth Grade 9 Key Points & Analysis

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Contains detailed analysis on context, themes and main characters which got me a grade 9 in eng lit Including quotes to use, techniques used and the writer's intentions Providing an alternative perspective for matters to be deabted in the exam

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AQA GCSE English Literature Shakespearean Text: Macbeth
Historical and Social Context
King James I
- Macbeth was written during the reign of KJI, known as the Jacobean era
- when S was writing Macbeth, KJI was a relatively new king of England
- he succeeded Elizabeth I in 1603 and Macbeth was written in 1606
- Macbeth can be seen as a play written specifically for, to flatter and please KJI
- as S is the King’s patron and the King grants him permission to show his plays
- he ultimately used the play as political propaganda to warn the people not to cross the King
- KJI had been King of Scotland since 1567
- S has set Macbeth in Scotland
- KJI was descended from the medieval thane B
 B is brave, loyal & conscientious in the play and prophesised his sons will be kings
- S could also be legitimising James’s rule
- when he took over the throne he became ruler of England, Scotland and Ireland
- KJI aimed to unify the three nations into “Great Britain” as king
 Malcolm the good and rightful king unifies lords & thanes of England & Scotland
 MB the tyrant and illegitimate king is seen as creating division
- although KJI was mostly popular, there were many plots to kill him, this is treason
- the most serious, and famous, of these plots was the Gunpowder Plot of 1605
- S includes multiple references to treason in Macbeth
- The most serious being the regicide of King Duncan
- all these acts of treason have terrible consequences for those who commit them
- they are all killed, in battle, by execution and suicide, connection to the power of 3
- S could be appealing to him by presenting a warning to any potential traitors
- attempt a plot against the king and suffer eternal consequences
- KJI wrote a book – the Basilikon Doron, set out his belief in the Divine Right of Kings
- the Divine Right of Kings was a belief that kings and queens are chosen by God
- these rulers are, therefore, representatives of God on Earth
- meaning there would be religious consequences for anyone attempting to overthrow a king
- S includes multiple references to the afterlife in Macbeth
- suggesting that anyone plotting against a king would end up in Hell


The Gunpowder Plot
- KJI was mostly popular but there were plots to kill him, the GP plot is the most serious
- this was initiated by Guy Fawkes who is a keen Catholic and disagreed with protestants
- The Gunpowder Plot 1605 were acts of treason which S referenced in the play
- the most serious one being the regicide of King Duncan, breaking the great chain of being
- all these acts of treason have terrible consequences for the characters in the play
- all are killed, either in battle, execution or by suicide, coincidentally there are 3 traitors
- S is appealing to KJI by representing a warning to any potential traitors
- warning that those who attempt to plot against the king will suffer eternal consequences

, Christianity and God
- Jacobean audiences were overwhelmingly Christians, believed in literal word of the Bible
- this meant they had a very real fear of Hell, witches, demons and the Devil
 LMB calling upon evil “spirits” in A1S4, was seen as blasphemous and shocking
- regicide was a mortal sin, for which the culprit would go to Hell
 both MB & LMB ask for their crimes to be hidden from God and Heaven
- because they know the consequences of committing regicide
- there is a widespread belief in witches, due to KJI’s obsession with witchcraft
- their presence in the play represents a very real threat to order in Scotland
- the repeated appearances of the witches symbolise presence of evil in Macbeth
- the witches represent temptation to do evil for the human characters

William Shakespeare (1564-1616)
- most famous English playwright, his plays are divided into histories, comedies & tragedies
- S wrote for the acting group of the Lord Chamberlain’s Men
- became known as King’s Men in 1603 when KJI ascended to the throne
- S wrote in the Renaissance, period where there was an expansion of artistic expression
- this expression freed itself from the restrictions of previous centuries
- plays were extremely popular, central medium of entertainment in the Elizabethan era
- this carried on to the Jacobean era when KJI ascended to the throne
- S’s plays were a form of mass entertainment for Londoners during that period
- the belief systems in the 16th century accommodated the use of both black & white magic
- S often explores the power of magic, both good & bad in his plays, especially the later ones
- the idea of philosophy has also been developed which S effectively uses in all of his plays
- in tragedies like Macbeth, the harmony of the universe is overthrown, others only shaken
- S uses tragedies to bring the world on the edge of chaos, but something new comes at end
- as S explores the edge of abyss & explores the possibility of eternal darkness and chaos
- Macbeth is a play that moves in trajectory to chaos, which the audience sympathises with

The Great Chain of Being
- Jacobean audiences believed in the Great Chain of Being which structures society
- the Great Chain of Being was a belief in an order of things in the universe
- it represented a hierarchy of all things that asserted God’s authority at top of the chain
- in essence, the Great Chain of Being was God’s plan for the world
- any attempt to break the chain would upset God’s order, bring about disorder to the world
- an attempt to break the Great Chain of Being was, therefore, blasphemous
 MB becoming king, therefore his reign is terrible and chaotic
- an example of the chain being broken is when human characters act against their status
 LMB dominating MB, a woman controlling a man is an example in the play
- witches and the Devil existed outside of this chain
- the Devil, demons & witches attempted to break the Great Chain of Being
- sometimes by tempting humans to commit sinful acts and do bad deeds against God
- S included multiple references to the afterlife in Macbeth
- There is a repeated use of religious and biblical imagery
 suggesting anyone plotting against them will end up in Hell (MB, LMB)
 and those who honourably serve the King will go to heaven (Macduff)

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