Contrast
The idea of contrast is the basic
building block of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The entire play is
constructed around groups of opposites and doubles. Nearly every characteristic
presented in the play has an opposite: Helena is tall, Hermia is short; Puck
plays pranks, Bottom is the victim of pranks; Titania is beautiful, Bottom is grotesque.
Further, the three main groups of characters (who are developed from sources as
varied as Greek mythology, English folklore, and classical literature) are
designed to contrast powerfully with one another: the fairies are graceful and
magical, while the craftsmen are clumsy and earthy; the craftsmen are merry,
while the lovers are overly serious. Contrast serves as the defining visual
characteristic of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, with the play’s most
indelible image being that of the beautiful, delicate Titania weaving flowers
into the hair of the ass-headed Bottom. It seems impossible to imagine two
figures less compatible with each other. The juxtaposition of extraordinary
differences is the most important characteristic of the play’s surreal atmosphere
and is thus perhaps the play’s central motif; there is no scene in which
extraordinary contrast is not present.
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