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Am I the only one trying to figure out what the stone guy represents?
But I think that when we communicate them we should do so in such a way that we also point to our Hope. The Psalms are a great example. So many of them start off with David sharing his deep pain and anguish, and yet they end up pointing to how God is good and that David still has hope.
I respectfully disagree. I think art can be beautiful and sad at the same time. Is there not a powerful message in Romeo and Juliet even though they were "star-crossed lovers"? Tragedy can teach us much if it is truthful. It doesnt always have to be explicitly hopeful in my opinion.
The reason many don't like Romeo and Juliet is because it has become a cliche of our culture.
You're forgetting that this play is a tragedy. Posit your negatives to support a tragic ending and you end up with an amazing play.
About the only redeeming part of the play is the message...
Quote from: Colin Michael on May 19, 2009, 05:46:41 AMYou're forgetting that this play is a tragedy. Posit your negatives to support a tragic ending and you end up with an amazing play. Tragedy - a drama in which a character (usually a good and noble person of high rank) is brought to a disastrous end in a narrative, depicting serious and important events.Uber fail for R&J. Firstly, no character in R&J is good an noble. Secondly, there are no serious or important events in the story. It is merely a couple young teens who have a crush one each other in a small Italian village. This just can't compare to any of the other tragedies that I mentioned earlier.
You're putting it in the terms of our American society. In Shakespeare's time, nothing is nobler than love.
Also, your definition of tragedy is somewhat lacking. You're forgetting the tragic flaw and the nature of characters in a tragedy as being "better than life".
Quote from: Colin Michael on May 19, 2009, 04:30:25 PMYou're putting it in the terms of our American society. In Shakespeare's time, nothing is nobler than love. I'm not putting it in terms of American society at all. Actually R&J's "love" probably fits with typical American society's perceptions of love. I am putting it in terms of reality, in which case their lustful relationship is nothing to aspire to or respect.Quote from: Colin Michael on May 19, 2009, 04:30:25 PMAlso, your definition of tragedy is somewhat lacking. You're forgetting the tragic flaw and the nature of characters in a tragedy as being "better than life".I got my definition from the dictionary, and I am forgetting nothing. I know that it is supposed to be a great hero who is brought down by their flaw. But the problem here is that there is no great hero to begin with. We just have a whole bunch of characters who are full of flaws and who the reader doesn't even care about.
Characters that you don't particularly care about.