메뉴 건너뛰기
Library Notice
Institutional Access
If you certify, you can access the articles for free.
Check out your institutions.
ex)Hankuk University, Nuri Motors
Log in Register Help KOR
Subject

Much Ado About Nothing and the Representation of Human Relationships
Recommendations
Search
Questions

『헛소동』과 인간관계의 재현

논문 기본 정보

Type
Academic journal
Author
Journal
The Shakespeare Association Of Korea Shakespeare Review Vol.41 No.3 KCI Accredited Journals
Published
2005.9
Pages
441 - 470 (30page)

Usage

cover
📌
Topic
📖
Background
🔬
Method
🏆
Result
Much Ado About Nothing and the Representation of Human Relationships
Ask AI
Recommendations
Search
Questions

Abstract· Keywords

Report Errors
Much Ado about Nothing is a play about representation. Characters in this play secretly represent themselves, in some way or other, as beings of some sort according to their own desire and the conception of their relations with others in their society while doing everyday things such as greeting, masquerading, wit-cracking, etc. In some cases their representations face objections whether directly or indirectly, but in most cases they are accepted for the sake of "peaceable" relationships and form the reality of their actual relationships. In fact, the actualities of human relationships in this play look real only when they are represented; the subjects of representation seem to occupy a realm broadly conceptual in nature, while the represented ones are felt to be so real that every character is quick to respond to them. The human relationship in this play becomes more alive and real by being represented, whether by courteous conversations or play-acts for the gulls to eavesdrop.
That the representations look more real awakens us to the fact that the world as we know it is never real but a constructed one. There is no knowing the real world without the mediacy of language; things as we know them are not the things themselves but the concepts of them. Seen in this way, the play is a version of the world outside which becomes more alive and real by being represented. This is perhaps what Shakespeare meant by saying, "the whole world is a stage" and what the monstrous "nothing" in the title of the play really means. The play is a world which is, though represented, not a mere fiction because the world itself is not in a position to be asserted to be more real than the represented one.

Contents

1. 서론
2. 자기 극화의 도구로서의 말
3. 가면무도회, 엿듣기, 농담을 통한 재현
4. 재현의 문제점
5. 결론
인용문헌
Abstract

References (0)

Add References

Recommendations

It is an article recommended by DBpia according to the article similarity. Check out the related articles!

Related Authors

Frequently Viewed Together

Comments(0)

0

Write first comments.

UCI(KEPA) : I410-ECN-0101-2010-840-003098514