Preview

How Clothing Imagery Defines the Characters Within "King Lear"

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1095 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
How Clothing Imagery Defines the Characters Within "King Lear"
There are many ways in which a person can use their appearance as extensions of their personalities. Through viewing the attire of another, their age, income or class, interests, nationality or religion can be determined. A person with a pressed black suit, a gold watch, alligator skin briefcase and golfer tie can be classified as a middle aged, business man with a good income living in a city. This is all concluded from examining image that that man was presenting. The outward appearance of a character provides a direct connection to that characters nature, and helps the readers interpret their emotions. Imagery is a word, phrase, or figure of speech (especially a simile or a metaphor) that addresses the senses, suggesting mental pictures of sights, sounds, smells, tastes, feelings, or actions. Images offer sensory impressions to the reader and also convey emotions and mood through their verbal pictures. Clothing images can be used to deceive, reveal truth and suggest a journey of self-discovery, within a character. Shakespeare uses clothing imagery within King Lear as a central theme in which readers may discern the complexity of the characters presented in the play.

Garments can be used to reveal as well as conceal a character choosing to show either of these feelings. They can deceive through the means of a disguise. In King Lear deception is an underlying issue that is expressed in many characters. Goneril and Regan use their elaborate costumes to hide their true personalities.

Thou art a lady:

If only to go warm were gorgeous,

Why, nature needs not what thou gorgeous wearest,

Which scarcely keeps thee warm. (Act II, scene iv, ll 301 - 304)

Lear states that if warmth were all that were needed, then his daughters do not need their elegant dress. He emphasises to them that should they take off, or expose, their images of splendour, then the world would know what ungrateful and hypocritical daughters Goneril and Regan truly are. Another character masking

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Images that are used to create feeling. They help us experience the words with our five senses. Touching, smelling, hearing, tasting, and seeing are used in The Most Dangerous Game to create imagery. This sentence is a perfect example of astounding imagery “It’s so dark,” he thought, “that i could sleep without closing my eyes; the night would be my eyelids--.” The setting of the story is immediately given. When you read this sentence, you can imagine how dark it is by actually closing your eyes like Rainsford and experience how dark the night sky really was. Another example of imagery is, “The hunter shook his head several times, as if he were puzzled. Then he straightened up and took from his case one of his black cigarettes; its pungent incense like smoke floated up to Rainsford’s nostrils.” You can smell the incense like it was right in front of you. You can imagine the smoke rising in the air as Rainsford breathed it in. You can also sense the nervousness and suspense, and suspense is a reader’s favorite…

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    An example of imagery is “It was like coming into the cold marbled room of a mausoleum after the moon has set. (Bradbury 10)” Bradbury uses this statement to show us as the reader that he wants us to feel or create an image of Montag walking into a room that pretty much lifeless and dark. The author uses this feeling and imagery because in the novel the characters portray humans that can not think for themselves so therefore it seems…

    • 370 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    An example of imagery is when in the movie Atticus shoots the dog and Jem’s face shows that he was really surprised, when his dad shot the gun and killed the dog because he had no clue that he could do that. Another example of imagery was in the book on page 128 it says “Jem was paralyzed, I had to pinch him to get him to move again.” I think it showed that Jem didn’t know what his father was capable of.…

    • 400 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    You and a partner will teach a literary concept or background detail as it relates to the play Macbeth. The class will be take a test on Monday, 5/12 including all of these concepts:…

    • 1764 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    puritan vs contemporary

    • 735 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Imagery is the use of descriptive language in order to paint a picture in the mind of the reader. If Anne Bradstreet reads a sentence describing a tree and Jason Mraz reads the same sentence 200 years later they both have the same picture in their mind. In "To My Dear and Loving Husband," Anne Bradstreet puts a picture in the mind of the reader of tremendous amounts of gold…

    • 735 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Short Story Dewey Byar

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages

    For instance, imagery is used many times by the author to give a clear, and vivid image to the reader. The details in the lines "His hair bleached pale from the sun, fell unnoticed over his eyes, and in the moonlight, his tanned face was darker than his hair. The top of his lip touched his upper lip as he…

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Most figures of speech cast up a picture in your mind. These pictures created or suggested by the writer is called 'imagery'. To fully understand the world of imagery, we must also understand how the writer uses it to convey more than what is actually being said or literally meant. This is represented in a variety of texts that we will take a closer look at such as John Steinbeck’s Of Mice & Men and the two poems Weapons Training and Homecoming by poet Bruce Dawe.…

    • 275 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Imagery is used in literature in order to describe or enhance sensory experiences to the text. An instance of visual imagery might evoke a visual cue such as: the crimson blood flowed slowly down his charred face. An auditory imagery uses language that such as bells chimed and rooster crowed. Olfactory imagery might read: his sweaty socks smelled of rotting fish and musty cellars.Metaphors and similes are also common forms of imagery used in literature. These are phrases that us "like" or "as" or not, but either is used to compare two ideas for effect. "Her face is a garden" or "He is as bold as a lion."…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bastards, scorn sisters, vengeful family members and numerous amounts of deaths, what a tragedy. Shakespeare’s play “King Lear” allows the audience to watch as two families are torn apart by greed for the same reason, power. Among the themes developed through animal imagery, the most notable ones would be those of Madness, Family and Nothingness. In the well renowned play “King Lear”, animal imagery is used throughout the play to give thorough insight to the themes of Madness, Family and Nothingness.…

    • 1562 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    King Lear is one of Shakespeare’s most refined works. In accordance to the majority of Shakespeare's tragedies, the characters in King Lear are well developed and portray evident personalities. Their characteristics and actions are so extreme that they closely mirror those of animals. In particular, Shakespeare uses animal imagery in King Lear to illustrate the vulnerability, cruelty, and perceptivity of critical characters.…

    • 730 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The male costuming in the play appropriately demonstrates how their love is fabricated because it shows the overcast of their lives interfering with relationships. The darkness in the characters is addressed through the dark clothing in the trailer. After Mercutio attempts to convince Romeo to dance, Romeo says, “Not I, believe me. You have dancing shoes / With nimble soles, I have a soul of lead / So stakes me to the ground I cannot move” (I.iv.14-16). Romeo’s love for Rosaline loiters in his mind because he cannot find love, which leads to forcing Juliet into a relationship to get over not having Rosaline. Therefore, Romeo’s teenage depression brings him to be a love hungry fool, which sparks the relationship in the first place. The costumes…

    • 471 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In conclusion, Shakespeare uses literary devices such as similes, metaphors, and personification to reveal the rise and fall of Macbeth as evil slowly seizes his good will and stains his mind with impure thoughts of murder and deceit. Without the use of literary devices the reader may not understand the entirety of the line or situation. By using these devices the audience can thoroughly convey the tone or imagery in the text and properly respond with their own emotions towards the scene transpiring in the book. Personification or bringing liveliness to an object that would not otherwise convey actions, imagery or sight text used to display a picture the author wants you to see, and similes or comparisons being made being two objects or people…

    • 147 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Costume Design in Macbeth

    • 1603 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Macbeth is strongly associated in most imaginations with the peculiar and picturesque costume of the Highlanders, as that common to all ancient Scotland. Walter Scott relates with great satisfaction, how with his own hand he plucked the huge bunches of black plumes from the bonnet in which Kemble was just about to appear as Macbeth, and substituted the single broad eagle-quilled feather of the Highland chief, sloping across his brow. Scott is an authority not to be appealed from on any such point; and Macbeth, from his name, was of Celtic race. Yet there may be some exaggeration in the idea of the universal prevalence of the Highland costume in the courts and camps of the ancient Scottish kings.…

    • 1603 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Several characters in Shakespeare 's King Lear undergo transformations for both driving the play 's momentum and allowing for a social layer to preside within the work. King Lear displays characters whose disguises make significant class differentiations, favorably casting a light on the lower class. Realizing that he is without a home and loving daughters, King Lear learns to sympathize with a beggar, and unclothes himself in an act to recuperate his lost innocence. Edgar, the victim of deception, treads into the disguise of a beggar with which Lear sympathizes, and relinquishes his past identity. He has seen the life of 'poor Tom ' secured and presumes that he will remain by guising himself into that same class. The banished Earl of Kent disguises himself a peasant in order to restore his affiliations with the nobility. Therefore, through these characters a transition into the lower social realm is made through disguise in order to reclaim their lost statures, and it is in that transitional phase that the audience learns, in different ways learns, what the use of disguise means, and what commentary it makes on the conception of class.…

    • 2046 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The concept of Nature in Shakespeare’s King Lear1 is not simply one of many themes to be uncovered and analyzed, but rather it can be considered to be the foundation of the whole play. From Kingship through to personal human relations, from representations of the physical world to notions of the heavenly realm, from the portrayal of human nature to the use of animal imagery; Nature permeates every line of King Lear. However as I intend to argue, Nature in all of these contexts is a social construct, which is utilized in order to legitimize the existing social order. In order to do this it is first necessary to draw a very brief sketch of the political and social beliefs of the Elizabethan and Jacobean ages, whilst outlining my arguments for believing that Nature is a socially constructed concept. In light of these arguments I will then analyze the representations of nature in King Lear to show how the play can be seen as both a portrayal of and a contribution to the social and political beliefs of the time.…

    • 2753 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics