Understanding Shakespeare: As You Like It by Robert A. Albano - HTML preview

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Joseph Rosenblum, in his A Reader’s Guide to Shakespeare, makes the following remarks:

 

  1. The Pastoral Comedies of Classical Roman times describe “lost happiness.”
  2. In the Pastoral, the mythic lost world is set in a simple and rural environment. It presents an image of all things desirable to honest people. The court is corrupt, an unnatural home of the wicked and ambitious, a world of artifice.
  3. The Two Worlds Theme: Artifice and Nature.
  4. Love is part of the natural world.
  5. The Love Pairings have purpose:
  1. Rosalind-Orlando – refined love: Rosalind recognizes silliness of it but still falls victim to it.
  2. Touchstone-Audrey – earthly love, physical passion, lust.
  3. Phebe-Silvius – unrequited love, fickle mistress.
  1. Wicked men are converted in the forest. The forest has power to convert: (a) Oliver, (b) Duke Frederick.
  2. The forest is a cleansing experience, a place to renew honesty and virtue.