Shakespeare repeats in the fifth act earlier situations and images to bring Coriolanus’s story full circle; he also creates reversals in the direction of action, the tenor of images, and the predominance of certain word-patterns to show the changes in that story. The two principles lend a conclusiveness to the fifth act. One of the two principles at work in the ending of Coriolanus is called “repetition.” Caius Martius rises to the first peak when, lord of the field, he receives the same Coriolanus and returns triumphant to Rome. Then he sinks back into wrangling with the tribunes and plebeians, finally falling into the degradation of banishment. In the repetition of this sequence, almost entirely played out in the fifth act, but from this pitch he once again falls, this time into the degradation of death. The dramatic technique of repetition, however, is not the only principle at work in the play’s conclusion, and if we examine the fifth act from a different vantage point, we shall perceive the lineament of another structure underlying the design of the mirrored pyramids. The other principle in the ending of the play, though not so dominantly as repetition, might be variously called reversal. The boomerang of reversal in the ending of Coriolanus is most obviously seen in its pattern of action. Looking at what happens in the play through the lens of reversal gives a different, larger structural image. That is, banishment of Coriolanus, the decision to join with Aufidius, and the return of Coriolanus. This broad pattern of action is reversal in its most general sense.
한국중앙영어영문학회 [The Jungang English Language And Literature Association Of Korea]
설립연도
1968
분야
인문학>영어와문학
소개
본 학회는 영미어문학의 학술연구와 이에 부합하는 아래의 사업을 기획 수행하며,
또한 회원 상호간의 친목을 도모함을 목적으로 한다.
1. 학회지 발간
2. 연구 발표회, 강연회, 공동연구
3. 영미어문학 관련 도서출판
4. 영미어문학 관계 도서 및 자료의 모집 및 비치
5. 기타 본회의 목적 달성에 필요한 사업
간행물
간행물명
영어영문학연구 [The Jungang Journal of English Language and Literature]