Vision in Shakespeare’s Tragic Plays: Perception, Deception, Delusion

Authors

  • Nataša Šofranac

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18485/bells.2014.6.9

Keywords:

Shakespeare, tragedy, vision, eyes, sight, see, seem, perception, mind, error

Abstract

Visual effects are, naturally, conspicuous in theatrical performances, but even when we read Shakespeare we can internalise the experience of his characters and visualise the scenes. Vision is also important at another tier, that of his characters themselves, the way they see and experience other characters, the world and, very importantly, themselves. Sometimes because of distorted vision, sometimes because of malevolent input that works on their minds, or just because of inherent subjectivity of perception, the appearance of persons and things was substantially different from reality and that causes a tragic course of events and ultimate catastrophe. So, flawed vision was very much the tragic flaw of Shakespeare’s heroes.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2014-11-23

How to Cite

Šofranac, N. (2014). Vision in Shakespeare’s Tragic Plays: Perception, Deception, Delusion. Belgrade English Language and Literature Studies, 6(1), 175–189. https://doi.org/10.18485/bells.2014.6.9

Issue

Section

SHAKESPEARE: LITERARY AND CULTURAL STUDIES