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week-5_c.example.docx

These comments only for your example. Because you understand how to make it and, also you can give any one comments respond too, Other two you have to make it in your own words.

1) Revenge Drama and Pleasure

1) Aesthetic Art

Aesthetic Art is concerns with the study of the mind and emotions in relation to the sense of beauty. I believe that now in this present time that there is more aesthetic art than you would think in today's society. Oil paintings are some of the most beautiful pieces ofart out there and they are becoming very popular nowadays. Oil painting deal with using colors and mixing them together to make a rare and beautiful paintings.

2) Revenge Drama and Pleasure

In the excerpt above Shakespeare is speaking about the corruption that is going on in the royal family. He talks about the how the bed reeks from colluding against his father in evil acts. Shakespeare is painting a picture of how his uncle and mother have conspired against his father, in the bedroom where they're engaging in "incestuous" acts, according to Hamlet, you can also smell the odor of corruption. Shakespeare uses imagery again here in Act 5, scene 1: "Oh, treble woe Fall ten times treble on that cursed head, Whose wicked deed thy most ingenious sense Deprived the of! Hold off the earth awhile Till I have caught her once more in mine arms. (leaps into the grave) Now pile your dust upon the quick and dead, Till of this flat a mountain you have made, T' o'ertop old Pelion or the skyish head of blue Olympus." In this, Shakespeare's imagery paints a picture of Laertes jumping into his sisters grave and telling the gravedigger to bury them both. Laertes wants the gravedigger to cover them in dirt like a mountain as high as Mount Olympus (where the Greek Gods used to live, and giants would pile Mt. Ossa on top of Mt. Pelion to climb to heaven).  This imagery lead me to feel sorrow for Laertes as the writing suggested he was in pain from the loss of his sister. I sympathized for him and the grief he felt from what had just occurred, and I felt this way because of the visuals Shakespeare used in this play. Shakespeare, W. (2003). Act 5, scene 1. In No fear Shakespeare: Hamlet (p. 295). New York: SparkNotes.

3) Aesthetic in Art

"Aesthetics (/ɛsˈθɛtɪks/; also spelled æsthetics and esthetics also known in Greek as Αισθητική) is a branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of art, beauty, and taste, with the creation and appreciation of beauty.[1][2] It is more scientifically defined as the study of sensory or sensori-emotional values, sometimes called judgments of sentiment and taste.[3] More broadly, scholars in the field define aesthetics as "critical reflection on art, culture and nature."[4][5]" http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesthetics I would say that the writings of Elizabethan era so contain aesthetics.  The writers were very vivid and descriptive compared to today's writings.  The type of writing that practices aesthetics today are mysteries. 

1) Hamlet and the Modern Context

1) Hamlet and the Modern Context

The most recent revenge tragedy that i've seen is Sons of Anarchy. The plot was a young man who was raised in a biker club culture that was originally a group of individuals who stuck together as a family. Money became a forefront for this group and deterred the originally path set forth by the original president. The young mans father dies when he was younger and he eventually finds out that it was his fathers best friend. That same best friend marries his mother and throughout this series the young man plots revenge on his now "father".  The moral takeaway of this series was that the young man "Jax Teller" wants to get his fathers club out of the gun running business and into a legal empire. Jax is willing to do whatever it takes to become legal and get the club out of danger, and he's willing to put his life at risk to do it. He doesn't want his children to go through the same things he did, so everything Jax does is to get his family out of that town.  This series is loosely based on Hamlet and so many characters and scenes imitate that of Hamlet. Jax wants revenge on his dad's best friend, who is the reason his father isn't alive today and many of the club members have lost their lives. He eventually finds out the role his mother played in all of this and he is caught between the love for his mother and wanting to avenge his father's death. Horror is alive throughout this series as their are many deaths that happen. Family members die, children die, gang members, politicians, cops, and anything else you could think of.  I hope that anybody watching this series isn't reading this post, and I hope I didn't spoil anything for you. 

2)

Hamlet and the Modern Context

I suggest that the modern-day movie which most closely resembles Hamlet is The Graduate (1967), starring Dustin Hoffman as Benjamin Braddock. Benjamin comes home from school and begins to realize that nothing he learned in college prepared him for the immorality, materialism, and hypocrisy of real people in the real world. Ironically, his real education does not begin until he has graduated.

3) Lion King

I find that the Lion King is very similar to Hamlet. Scar kills his brother in order to take the throne and makes Simba believe he was responsible for Mofasa's death.  He runs away and begins a new life. However,  No la a childhood friends later runs into him and explains what Scar has done to the Prideland. As Simba struggles to face his past,  he chooses to face Scar in the end. As he faces Scar the truth is exposed and Scar Is defeated.  I think all tragedies entail a moral battle,  good verses evil. There's always an evil character and the' hero'. The dilemma is whether or not the hero will act and the result of his not acting.