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The plays and sonnets written by William Shakespeare are defined by the way in which they discuss the human condition through an understanding of the way in which people are motivated, emotionally inspired, and how they react to the world around them. The structured language made the work cleaver, the irreverence of the humour, the emotional romance of the tragedies, and the development of some of the best primary story lines are all foundational to much of the literature that has come since that time.
The construction of interpersonal relationships was crafted with such genius that they became a standard for the way in which to construct tales of love and war, tragedy and comedy since that time. The plays are standards for the theatre that act as the goals for aspiring actors in being able to accomplish the complexity of the roles they provide. Shakespeare is defined by an elevated status that did not exist during the time of their origination. William Shakespeare created the body of his work during the last half of the 16th century and continued to produce just beyond the first decade of the 17th century.
The plays were written in iambic pentameter poetic formulation and were notorious in their clever word usage and intellectually structured complexities. Through a unique understanding of the human condition, the relationships between the characters of his play have provided generations of readers and audiences with a deeper understanding of how people respond and relate to one another. Before the concept of psychology had emerged as a study of human relationships, the work of Shakespeare was providing templates of the ways in which actions and reactions were related within human experience.
The actor during the time of Shakespeare was not respected in the same manner that is given in this time period. There were no women actors, so all parts were played either be men or boys and men who were effeminate enough to portray their roles as women convincingly. The defence of the arts of the theatre suggested
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