Explain The Three Worlds In A Midsummer Night's Dream

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Show how Shakespeare establishes the three worlds in the opening scenes of ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ Within A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Shakespeare establishes the three worlds; the lovers, the mechanicals and the fairies. These worlds are created using particular wordplay which create semantic fields individuals to the creatures within each setting. These themes are gradually pulled together within the opening scenes, creating the impression of an imminent collision. For example; the semantic field of nature tends to be associated with the fairies, through their natural affiliation with such things in mythology and also due to the fact they inhabit a forest. However, Shakespeare establishes an incoming confrontation between the words through the gradual dispersion of this semantic field into the lovers’ and the mechanicals’ worlds. Firstly, Shakespeare uses particular rhythms to establish the three worlds, such as the fast, alternating rhythm of the fairies, which conveys their …show more content…

In contrast, the simple, yet effective use of oxymoron and malapropism within the world of the mechanicals, establishes them as the muddled, comedic group they portray. Bottom's confusion between "odious" and "odorous" and his conflicting phrase "monstrous little voice" increase the comedy of their scenes and amuse the audience, whilst establishing their

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