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i need some help on getting a character analysis by relation brtus and julius caesar to a celeberty now a days can you helpp??


thankss

2007-06-08 12:23:31 · 3 answers · asked by princess 1 in Arts & Humanities Theater & Acting

3 answers

Read the play. I might recommend a celebrity you never heard of.

2007-06-08 12:26:43 · answer #1 · answered by Alice K 7 · 0 1

Julius Caesar wouldn't be Julius Caesar WITHOUT Julius freakin' Caesar as the main character. Have you even read Julius Caesar? I doubt it, because it's rather bloody blatant why Caesar's important.

2016-05-20 04:53:32 · answer #2 · answered by isabella 3 · 0 0

Think about the relationship between Robin Williams and Matt Damon in 'Good Will Hunting".
Understanding and help on Ceasers part (Williams) met with Brutus' (Damon) rejection of the attempt to bond. 8^{I)


Julius Caesar: The victorious leader of Rome, it is the fear that he may become King and revoke the privileges of men like Cassius that leads to his death at the hands of Cassius, Brutus and their fellow conspirators.

The threat that Caesar was moving away from the ideals of the Roman republic towards an Empire ruled directly by himself is the chief reason so many senators, aristocrats and even Caesar's friend Brutus, conspired to kill him.


Marcus Brutus: The most complex character in this play, Brutus is one of the men who assassinate Caesar in the Senate. Brutus is complex, because he does not kill Caesar for greed, envy nor to preserve his social position like so many of the other conspirators against Caesar. This Brutus makes very clear in his speech in Act III, Scene II (Lines 12-76), when he explains his actions as being for the good of Rome.

Unlike the other conspirators, Brutus is in fact a dear friend of Caesar's but kills his beloved friend not for who he is, but what he could become as a King. It is for this reason that when Brutus dies by suicide in Act V, Mark Antony describes his bitter enemy by saying "This [Brutus] was the noblest Roman of them all;" (Act V, Scene V, Line 68). Mark Antony recognizes with these words that Brutus acted from a sense of civic duty, not malice, nor greed nor envy.

http://absoluteshakespeare.com/guides/caesar/characters/characters.htm

2007-06-08 12:38:20 · answer #3 · answered by Joe Schmo from Kokomo 6 · 0 1

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