The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare | Act 2, Scene 8
Vložit
- čas přidán 24. 10. 2019
- Summarize videos instantly with our Course Assistant plugin, and enjoy AI-generated quizzes: bit.ly/ch-ai-asst William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice explained with scene summaries in just a few minutes!
Professor Regina Buccola of Roosevelt University provides an in-depth summary and analysis of Act 2, Scene 8 of William Shakespeare's play The Merchant of Venice.
Download the free study guide and infographic for The Merchant of Venice here: www.coursehero.com/lit/The-Me...
A parable illustrating the consequences of greed and usury, William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice is among the most controversial of his plays.
The comedy centers on Antonio, who has extended credit to his friend Bassanio so that he may pursue the beautiful Portia. But in order to do so, Antonio must use the services of Jewish money lender Shylock.
When Bassanio arrives to seek Portia’s hand in marriage, he finds that money will not be enough. Portia’s father has created a challenge to choose a suitor for her. He has set up three caskets, or boxes. The man who chooses the casket with Portia's portrait inside gets her hand. Luckily, he chooses correctly.
Unfortunately, when Antonio’s ships are lost, Shylock takes him to court in an effort to collect on his debt-which, in the absence of monetary compensation, will take the form of a pound of flesh.
When Shylock will not agree to mercy, Portia disguises herself as a lawyer and finds that should Shylock take Antonio's blood, which is not part of the contract, his own life will be forfeit. Since it is impossible to take a pound of flesh without spilling blood, Shylock's claim is void. The result finds Shylock losing his fortune to Antonio and the state.
This comedy is often characterized as blatantly anti-Semitic, which is supported by the rampant anti-Jewish sentiment of the day. While to modern eyes this reads as astonishingly stereotypical, the play remains valuable for its somewhat sympathetic depiction of the slings and arrows endured by European Jews.
Famous playwright William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice was written around 1596-97 at the height of his career. Borrowing from existing Italian and medieval stories for the characters and basic plot, his characterization of the Jewish Shylock and “Christian” Venetians highlights social, religious, and moral tensions of the time.
The Merchant of Venice contains many powerful symbols including rings symbolizing the strongest of human bonds, flesh representing life which is more valuable when threatened, and gold symbolizing power and status. Other themes include appearances versus reality, worth, prejudice, and mercy.
Explore Course Hero’s collection of free literature study guides, Q&A pairs, and infographics here: www.coursehero.com/lit/
About Course Hero:
Course Hero helps empower students and educators to succeed! We’re fueled by a passionate community of students and educators who share their course-specific knowledge and resources to help others learn. Learn more at www.coursehero.com
Master Your Classes™ with Course Hero!
Get the latest updates:
Facebook: / coursehero
Twitter: / coursehero
Thank you for all of these great videos
Thanks for your videos they are definitely useful for students
Indeed you are a hero you helped me with my rough draft essay
thank for all these videos on merchant of venice mam
Mam can you pls make videos on Tressure trove Poems
this really helps with my learning great explanation for understanding
these are some great videos thank you for explaining
Thnx for this educational video. This really helped me a lot in my exam.
this comment is in all of the videos in this
I love this
So much thank you mam
Thank you for your video
Exactly
@@piyalisaha6720 lol sis you just reminded me that I had commented 2 years ago😂
Thank you very much
Exactly
Thankyou
Loved it ❤♥
Hi
Boring
Exactly
Baka only ads I see
Yo wai mo
free my boy shylock he did nothin wrong 🗣
REAL ‼️‼️‼️
Change cloths
Before 1 day to my exam
Mee to tomr is my exam..
10 min before my exam😂😂
Noice professor
How many indian icse students are here
Let's see
Exactly
Can't you explain in hindi
Riya Singh 🌹
Go to concept clarity he explains in hindi
She cant explain in hindi...bcoz she is not a Indian