16 Macbeth Act 4 Scene 1 Full Commentary and Analysis

  • 3 years ago
If you have enjoyed this video, please consider making a small donation: https://www.patreon.com/literature_walkthrough

See also my tips on reading Shakespeare’s LANGUAGE: https://dai.ly/x80qtdh
You might also find my Romeo and Juliet series interesting: https://dai.ly/x80qt0r

This video is a line-by-line walkthrough guide for William Shakespeare’s Macbeth: Act 4, Scene 1.

I provide a close reading of the entire scene, including:
— Detailed explication
— Commentary
— Literary analysis

All commentary is supplemented by in-text, line-by-line study notes designed to help students:
— Prepare for GCSE, A-Level, IB, and AP evaluation
— Prepare for general high school and college quizzes, exams, and essays
— Generate ideas for analysis essays
— Participate knowledgeably in class discussions
Click here to download the annotated text of Macbeth: https://sites.google.com/view/shakespeare-walkthrough/home

This video discusses :

PLOT:
— Witches are casting spells in their cavern when Macbeth arrives
— The witches’ master evil spirit reveals to Macbeth 4 visions/prophecies/equivocations:
1) Beware MacDuff
2) No one born of woman will harm Macbeth
3) Macbeth will be safe until Birnam forest marches to his castle in Dunsinane
4) A vision of a line of many kings, all looking like Banquo’s descendants
— Macbeth “awakes” from the visions and commands Lennox to have MacDuff and his family murdered

CHARACTER:
— Witches: equivocators, sociopaths; personifications/projections of Macbeth’s psyche, temptation, and ambition; wise, they know Macbeth will hear what he wants to hear; trickster Gods, scapegoats for our own stupidity or bad luck; horror show, great Hollywood, halloweeny fun
— Macbeth: alignment with evil complete, voluntarily enters evil’s realm; fool, still hasn’t learned the A vs R lesson; total, nihilistic abandon of the desperate tyrant

THEME:
— Equivocation
— Projection; we see what we want to see
— Tyrant’s willingness to burn the world; Cain’s spite
— Manhood; weak/insecure man’s obsession with male heirs
— Journey through the labyrinth / underworld / belly of the whale as metaphor for journey through one’s own psyche
— Thought vs action
— Nihilism of the tyrant; willingness to destroy

Recommended