Utilisateur
Juliet - Love
Uses a natural metaphor → love is infinite and powerful
Juliet speaks with emotional maturity, subverting expectations of a young girl
Shows love as pure and overwhelming, not a shallow attraction
Juliet - Love
Attacks social identity and inherited conflict
Juliet is philosophical and rational, unlike Romeo’s impulsiveness
Shows love as stronger than social labels
👉 Link to context: Elizabethan importance of family honour.
Juliet - Conflict
Oxymoron reflects Juliet’s inner conflict
Religious and animal imagery → betrayal vs love
Shows her emotional intelligence, processing contradiction
👉 Examiner buzzword: “duality”
Juliet - Patriarchy
Juliet politely resists marriage expectations
Shows women treated as economic/social tools
Early contrast with later defiance of her father
👉 Context gold: Elizabethan arranged marriages.
Juliet - Fate
Foreshadowing links love and death
Suggests fate is inescapable from the start
Reinforces tragedy genre expectations
👉 Tie in: Prologue – “star-cross’d lovers”
Presented as obedient, innocent, and dutiful
Respects parental authority: “It is an honour that I dream not of”
Seen as naïve and controlled by patriarchal expectations
👉 Purpose: reflects Elizabethan ideals of female obedience
Becomes emotionally mature and assertive
Expresses love with intellectual depth, not impulsiveness
Challenges social structures: “What’s in a name?”
Shows loyalty and moral strength, even after Romeo kills Tybalt
👉 Purpose: Shakespeare presents Juliet as the voice of reason in love
Presented as independent, brave, and decisive
Defies her father and societal norms
Willing to face death rather than lose autonomy
Takes control of her fate through action
👉 Purpose: exposes the cruelty of patriarchy and the cost of repression
Shakespeare presents Juliet as a character who matures rapidly, challenging patriarchal authority and social conflict, ultimately becoming a tragic figure whose autonomy is destroyed by fate and societal constraints.
Juliet - Love/Maturity
Shows active rebellion against family loyalty
Juliet initiates the rejection of patriarchal identity
Love is presented as stronger than blood
Juliet - Love/Maturity
Juliet is cautious and sensible, unlike Romeo
Presents her as emotionally controlled and realistic
Subverts the stereotype of impulsive female emotion
👉 Examiner keyword: emotional restraint
Juliet - Conflict/Inner Struggle
Juliet resolves internal conflict logically
Demonstrates loyalty and moral clarity
Shows maturity under pressure
👉 Strong contrast with Romeo’s rash behaviour
Juliet - Patriarchy/Defiance
Direct defiance of her father
Short, declarative sentence → confidence and independence
Highlights oppression of women in Elizabethan society
👉 Great for questions on parent-child conflict
Juliet - Fate/Death
Oxymoron links love and death
Juliet takes control of the tragic ending
Challenges the idea that she is passive
👉 Shows her final transformation into an active tragic hero
