Alison Grace
New Member
I went to an information day on RT and the lady was the head marker of Revenge. She strongly advised using Hamlet: not as a supplementary text, necessarily, but mention it to indicate wider reading. Hamlet, afterall, is the archetypal revenge tragedy.
Also, High Noon is an excellent eg of RT- the inversion of our avenger is handy when talking about the influence of context on texts and how genres are interpreted. The tragedy is stronger than at first perceived: the fact that Zinneman was making a statement about his society which were panicking about communism and all that means that the tragedy envelopes its audience also. It exposes the human habit to cling to each other, and be influenced by each other, instead of observing our own sense of individuality and being willing to stand against convention for the sake of it. Lots of symbolism used: facades for instance- the town looks like cardboard cut-outs, which represents the facades we hide our true selves with (note that most conversations where we find out about characters occur in rooms), etc etc etc...
High Noon is a top text!! =D
Also, High Noon is an excellent eg of RT- the inversion of our avenger is handy when talking about the influence of context on texts and how genres are interpreted. The tragedy is stronger than at first perceived: the fact that Zinneman was making a statement about his society which were panicking about communism and all that means that the tragedy envelopes its audience also. It exposes the human habit to cling to each other, and be influenced by each other, instead of observing our own sense of individuality and being willing to stand against convention for the sake of it. Lots of symbolism used: facades for instance- the town looks like cardboard cut-outs, which represents the facades we hide our true selves with (note that most conversations where we find out about characters occur in rooms), etc etc etc...
High Noon is a top text!! =D