Answer:
We could change the language and adapt it to reflect the contemporary English we use nowadays. That would make the play more understandable, especially for the young people and wake up their interest for the theatre.
We could change the setting, that is, time and place of some plays and adapt it to contemporary surroundings, without changing the topic of the plays, as Shakespearean problems and inner struggles are still present in the 21st century, only in different ways.
For example, we could change characters' professions or some circumstances without changing the plot of the story. Or, perhaps, try to represent some contemporary family issues, by readapting Hamlet into a boy who is fighting against his stepfather.
Answer:
A.) The homes have deteriorated from their original grandness.
Explanation:
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<u>Answer:</u>
<em>Two sisters facing a much more serious conflict
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<u>Explanation:</u>
Antigone is described as young who rises up independence against the power of the state. Her acts demonstrate political and moral championship after being successful in a male dominated arena. She is strong enough that she decides to support her brother even though she was prohibited from doing so. Through her strength and courage, she took the risk and became a hero.
Her desire are beyond her limit but she does not give up, she moves to different communities even though she had lost hope but she was still determined to achieve all her goals.
Answer: Elie Wiesel, author of Night, uses figurative language to enhance your experience while reading this book. You'll examine four different types of figurative language in this lesson, and their roles in Wiesel's work: personification, symbolism, simile, and metaphor.