Midsummer Night's Dream Critical Analysis

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William Shakespeare has become one of the most famous and influential writers in the English literature, and his work has been reenacted and studied all over the world for several decades. However, we often do not get the chance to admire all of his other plays as the school curriculum in high school only covers his four most famous tragedies plays like Rome and Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth, and Othello. Now, as a college student, I am able to appreciate his work more as I have recently seen Shakespeare Midwinter Night’s Dream which is based on Shakespeare’s real play Midsummer’s Night’s Dream, a comedy that portrays the events that surround the marriage of a Duke, the love of four young lovers and a group of amateur actors that must put an act …show more content…

For example, the central conflict and the main action of the play happen right in the first three scenes of act one, when Hermia’s dad Egeus goes to complain to Theseus that his daughter does not want to obey him to marry Demetrius a young man who has his consent to marry his daughter. Yet, Hermia is not in love with Demetrius, she is in love Lysander, a young romantic and funny nobleman who is also in love with Hermia. On the other hand, Helena who is Hermia’s friend is deeply in love with Demetrius, but he does not love as he is in love with Hermia. As a result of this conflict, Hermia and Lysander decide to run off to the woods to escape from their hierarchical society, where Demetrius and Helena later join them. Once in the woods, the story complicates for the four lovers as Oberon the winter fairy tries to make Demetrius fall in love with Helena. But, this does not go according to his plan, as his servants Puck mistakenly puts the love potion on Lysander while he is asleep. This mistake causes Lysander to fall in love with Helena when we wake up. In the effort to fix his servant mistake, Oberon enchants Demetrius with the love potion, and he too falls in love with Helena when he wakes up. In the end, Oberon is able to lift of the enchantment of Lysander so that he and Hermia …show more content…

The first question that arises in this play is the order and the disorder of society. For instance, the social order of this society emphasizes that the father must pick his daughter’s husband and that he should enforce this for the benefit of his family. However, in the beginning of this play, I was able to observe how a family 's reputation is threatened when a young woman wishes to marry her one true love against her dad 's will. Yet, all of this changes when the four lovers find themselves lost in the woods far away from the ordered and the hierarchical society. Once in the woods Lysander and Demetrius find themselves to be in love with Helena instead of Hermia. This confusion now causes Hermia to feel unwanted by both Lysander and Demetrius and jealous of Helena, as she is the one that has the attention of both men. This disorder of relationships also happens within the fairies when the queen of the fairies falls in love with a human who is mistakenly being transformed into an ass. The second universal question that arises during this play is the appearance and the reality through the story, or the idea that things are not necessarily what they seem to be. For instance, in this play, Shakespeare tries to create a dreamy experience for the audience by making the characters think that their dreams were just part of their imagination when in reality those events really happened to them the night

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