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What are some dramatic techniques in Julius Caesar?
While there are hundreds of literary techniques, in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, allusion, hyperbole, and allegory are used most. Allusion is when a writer makes a reference to something about which they expect the audience should already know. Using Allusion makes the text more interesting and dramatic.
What is the dramatic climax of Julius Caesar?
Climax The climax of the play comes when Antony, by juxtaposing Caesar’s accomplishments, his generous will, and his corpse’s brutal wounds with the repeated statement that “Brutus is an honorable man,” persuades the people of Rome that Brutus and his co-conspirators aren’t honorable at all.
Why did Caesar swoon or faint?
If Caesar had stabbed their mothers they would have done no less. Indeed, before he fell down, when he realized the commoners were glad he refused the crown, he pulled open his robe and offered them his throat to cut. If I’d been a common laborer and hadn’t taken him up on his offer, to hell with me. And so he fainted.
What is the dramatic irony of Scene Four Julius Caesar?
The conspirators’ decision to let Mark Antony speak to the public about Caesar’s death is dramatic irony because we know his speech will cause a revolt. Finally, the overall plot to kill Caesar is dramatic irony because the audience knows Caesar is going to be assassinated.
What is a hyperbole in Julius Caesar?
Hyperbole in Julius Caesar A hyperbole is an exaggeration used to make a point. In Act I Scene i of Julius Caesar, two Roman generals are attempting to persuade a group of people to go home. The people are celebrating Caesar’s victory over Pompey. These same people once loved Pompey and are now celebrating his defeat.
What is the rising action in Julius Caesar?
The rising action is when Brutus and Cassius are fleeing for their lives. Trying to prevent tyranny, Brutus is now escaping the tyrany of Caesar’s ghost. With the assassination of Caesar, all of Rome is plunged into a civil war. The action rises as Antony’s and Octavian’s forces fight Cassius’ and Brutus’ forces.
What is the falling action in Caesar?
The brief falling action following his decision shows that Brutus still deludes himself into believing that history will vindicate him and judge has actions as honorable. In truth, the conclusion reveals that only the enemy sees his worth as an honorable man who has acted out of principle and a love for Rome.
What was falling sickness?
The term ‘epilepsy’ was in use, but the seizures known as ‘falling sickness’ were also described as the ‘falling evil’, ‘grand mal’ or – harking back to antiquity – ‘the sacred disease’. The conditions identified as such could often include other convulsive conditions or cases where the senses were distracted.
What is Brutus’s explanation for killing Caesar?
Brutus explains that Caesar must die because he fears Caesar will abuse his power as king.