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  1. Full Play Analysis. Shakespeare’s Richard III tells the story of Richard III’s bloody rise to, and fall from, power. Richard is a complex character because he is both protagonist and antagonist. He is the protagonist because he is the play’s principle character but he is also the text’s antagonist because the play centers around Richard ...

  2. Oct 7, 2020 · Richard III: short plot summary. After the various battles and power struggles documented in the three Henry VI plays, this ‘winter of discontent’ has given way to a ‘glorious summer’ with Edward, of the royal house of York, ruling securely as King of England. However, one man isn’t happy: Edward’s brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester.

  3. Plot overview. Richard III is a play about evil, violence and murder. It charts the rise of Richard, Duke of Gloucester, a cold-blooded and dastardly villain who slaughters his family and even ...

  4. Scenes to explore. Richard III is a play full of manipulation, murder and ghosts. In Shakespeare’s day, the stage would have been bare, the props few, and the lighting would depend upon the ...

  5. Analysis: Act 1, Scene 1. In the play’s well-known opening lines, Richard refers to events that Shakespeare chronicles in his earlier plays Henry VI, Part 1, Henry VI, Part 2, and Henry VI, Part 3, and with which he would have expected his viewers to be familiar. The Henry VI plays detail an exhausting civil war for the throne of England ...

  6. To explore the demise of Richard III through language, plot and structure. To learn about the elements of a Greek Tragedy and to make connections between a Greek Tragedy and Richard III. To use the play and its ideas as a springboard for writing challenges once a fortnight. Each lesson has an overarching ‘big question(s).’

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  8. Literary analysis involves examining all the parts of a novel, play, short story, or poem—elements such as character, setting, tone, and imagery—and thinking about how the author uses those elements to create certain effects. A literary essay isn’t a book review: you’re not being asked whether or not you liked a book or whether you’d ...

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