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Themes and Motifs

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Themes and Motifs In Lady Macbeth's sleepwalking scene she enters holding a candle, and the doctor asks her gentlewoman how the lady happens to have the candle. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Themes and Motifs


1
  • Themes and Motifs

2
Theme
  • Themes are the fundamental and often universal
    ideas explored in a literary work.

3
The Corrupting Power of Unchecked Ambition
  • One of the main themes of Macbeth is
  • The destruction wrought when ambition goes
    unchecked by moral constraints.
  • What is a moral constraint?

4
Theme of Ambition
  • Macbeth/Lady Macbeth
  • This theme is directly apparent in two main
    characters in the play.

5
Theme of ambition
  • Macbeth not naturally inclined to commit crime,
    yet deeply desires power and advancement. Kills
    Duncan against his better judgment and suffers
    guilt and paranoia. Deteriorates as play
    progresses.
  • Lady Macbeth more determined but less able to
    deal with the consequences of her actions. Her
    ambitions get the best of her and

6
Theme of Ambition
  • In each case ambition, (helped of course by the
    witches prophesies) is what drives this couple to
    commit these terrible atrocities.
  • Once one decides to pursue ambition with
    violence, the more out of control it becomes.

7
Theme of Ambition
  • The temptation to use violence to achieve the
    throne presents itself over and over again
    through the potential threats to the throne
    (Fleance, Malcom, Banquo).

8
'Fair is Foul and Foul is Fair'
  • Throughout Macbeth, fair appearances hide foul
    realities.
  • Examples
  • Macbeth sees the witches prophecies as fair, but
    to attain them he must commit the foul.
  • "There's no art/ To find the mind's construction
    in the face." (Act 1, Scene 4, Lines 11-12) King
    Duncan speaking of the former Thane of Cawdor.
  • Macbeth is a fair host as him and lady Macbeth
    plot King Duncans murder
  • Both a woman and a host, Lady Macbeth should be
    the model of grace and femininity, however, her
    thoughts are cold and evil

9
Theme of 'Fair is Foul and Foul is Fair'
  • Macbeth attempts to say amen after murdering
    the king. Thinking of religion is foul after
    such a heinous crime
  • "look like the innocent flower, / But be the
    serpent under't" (1.5.65-66). -Lady Macbeth to
    macbeth about murdering Duncan.
  • "Away, and mock the time with fairest show /
    False face must hide what the false heart doth
    know" (1.7.81-82). Macbeth. Speaking of keeping
    a nice face while already planning to murder
    Duncan.

10
Tragic Hero
  • A tragic hero is a character that the audience
    sympathizes with despite his/her actions that
    would indicate the contrary.

11
Tragic Hero
  • Macbeth, in spite of his horrible murders, is a
    pitiable man.
  • Macbeth internally suffers
  • Plagued by fear, paranoia, sleeplessness and
    exhaustion.

12
Tragic Hero
  • Macbeth is a pitiable man, despite his terrible
    crimes. His saving grace is that he did not want
    to commit the crime in the first place but was
    coerced by Lady Macbeth.
  • Macbeth suffers internally and is thus never able
    to enjoy his royal status

13
Lady Macbeth
  • Began as courageous and daring (still evil)
  • Courage deteriorated, broke down.

14
Lady Macbeth
  • Lady Macbeth courage and daring nature
    deteriorates into delusional, hapless
    somnambulist.
  • Breaks down mentally and physically because of
    the strain of the crime.

15
Macbeth/Lady Macbeth
  • Macbeth and his wife are pitiable characters
    because the reader is able to follow their every
    thought and action.  Thus, the reader sees not
    only their gruesome effects on the Scottish
    people but also on themselves.

16
Theme of Indecision and Internal Conflict
  • Macbeth indecisive
  • Murder and course of action

17
Indecision and internal conflict
  • Macbeth was indecisive up until the night of the
    murder about whether or not he should kill
    Duncan.
  • After he murders Duncan, he is unsure of his
    course of action (what should he do next?)
  • Rashly decides to kill Banquo.

18
Evil
  • Always a presence (fair is foul and foul is fair)
  • Lady Macbeth
  • Witches and Hecate
  • Macbeth
  • Murder of king Duncan- forgivable? Influence?
  • Banquo and his son
  • Macduffs Family

19
Order and Disorder
  • Disorder- Morality and trust- opening of the
    play?
  • Order- Prophesies?
  • Scotland under Duncans rule?
  • Natural chain of events- What happens?
  • Chain of being disrupted?
  • Examples of disrupted order
  • Macduffs slaughtered family. Caused by what?

20
Appearance vs. Reality
  • look like the innocent flower, be the serpant
    undrt
  • Human fronts- Playing a role
  • Actions/trees
  • Dagger/Banquos ghost

21
Violence and Tyranny
  • War and destruction (opening of play)
  • Killing killing and more killing.

22
Guilt and concience
  • Guilt of crimes committed
  • Lady Macbeth- sleepwalking, confessions, eventual
    death.
  • Macbeth- Inability to sleep, driving him to
    madness. Banquos ghost
  • Macbeths inner debate (killing Duncan)

23
Supernatural
  • Masterminds behind much of the action in the
    play.
  • Witches and Hecate
  • Drive action of the play.

24
Retribution
  • Shared-
  • Macbeth and Lady Macbeth
  • Had to pay.

25
Theme of light and darkness
  • Most of Macbeth takes place in the dark, and both
    Macbeth and Lady Macbeth seem to believe that the
    dark can hide their crimes, perhaps even from
    themselves.

26
King Duncan
  • When King Duncan announces that his eldest son
    Malcolm is heir to the throne, he says that
    Malcolm won't be the only one who receives new
    honors. The King promises that
  • "signs of nobleness, like stars, shall shine / On
    all deservers" (1.4.41-42

27
Macbeth
  • Moments later Macbeth also uses starlight as a
    metaphor for what is good and noble. As he is
    thinking of murdering both the King and Malcolm,
    he says to himself
  • Stars, hide your firesLet not light see my
    black and deep desiresThe eye wink at the hand
    yet let that be,Which the eye fears, when it is
    done, to see.  (1.4.50-53)
  • In short, his desires are so terrible, that he
    can't stand to have the stars shine on them he
    doesn't even want to look at them himself.

28
Lady Macbeth
  • At the end of a soliloquy in which Lady Macbeth
    talks herself into a murderous state of mind, she
    calls upon night to hide her deed from heaven and
    from herself

29
Lady Macbeth
  • Come, thick night, / And pall thee in the dunnest
    smoke of hell, / That my keen knife see not the
    wound it makes, / Nor heaven peep through the
    blanket of the dark, / To cry "Hold, hold!"
    (1.5.50-54).
  • In both its ideas and imagery, this passage is
    remarkably similar to Macbeth's speech in the
    previous scene.

30
Banquo
  • After the moon has gone down on the night in
    which Macbeth kills King Duncan, Banquo says to
    Fleance,
  • "There's husbandry in heaven / Their candles are
    all out" (2.1.4-5).
  • He means that there's not a star to be seen in
    the sky. If we think back, we may remember that
    this is exactly the kind of night Macbeth wanted,
    because he thought it might conceal his own guilt
    from himself.

31
Ross
  • It's strangely dark on the morning after the
    night of King Duncan's murder, and Ross says to
    an Old Man,
  • "by the clock, 'tis day, / And yet dark night
    strangles the travelling lamp" (2.4.6-7).

32
Ross
  • The "travelling lamp" is the sun, which should be
    lighting the new day. Ross goes on to speculate
    that the night is stronger than the day, or that
    the day is ashamed of itself. In either case, the
    cause would be the murder of King Duncan. The
    night would be strong because in that night the
    good King was murdered, and the day would be
    ashamed to shed light on the bloody scene of the
    murder.

33
Macbeth
  • When Macbeth goes to the witches to learn his
    fate, he greets them as
  • "you secret, black, and midnight hags!" (4.1.48).
  • An earlier scene suggests that Macbeth's visit
    actually occurs in the morning, but Macbeth
    associates dark with evil.

34
Lady Macbeth
  • In Lady Macbeth's sleepwalking scene she enters
    holding a candle, and the doctor asks her
    gentlewoman how the lady happens to have the
    candle. The gentlewoman replies,
  • "Why, it stood by her she has light by her
    continually 'tis her command" (5.1.22-23). The
    doctor then points out,
  • "You see, her eyes are open" (5.1.24), and the
    gentlewoman replies,
  • "Ay, but their sense is shut" (5.1.25).

35
  • Thus we see that Lady Macbeth, who eagerly
    awaited the dark hour of King Duncan's murder, is
    now afraid of the dark. And though her eyes are
    open, she can see only her own memories of
    murder. As she sleepwalks, Lady Macbeth imagines
    she sees a spot of King Duncan's blood on her
    hand. She rubs her hands to try to wash it away,
    but it won't disappear, and then she hears the
    bell that she herself rang on the night of King
    Duncan's murder
  • "Out, damned spot! out, I say!--One two why,
    then, 'tis time to do't.--Hell is murky!"
    (5.1.35-36).
  • Perhaps it is the darkness of the night of
    Duncan's murder which reminds her of the darkness
    of hell.
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