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English Literature GCSE WJEC EDUQAS

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  1. Shakespeare Overview wjec-eduqas
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  2. How To Answer The Shakespeare Questions wjec-eduqas
    3 主题
  3. Macbeth wjec-eduqas
    10 主题
  4. Romeo And Juliet wjec-eduqas
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  5. Much Ado About Nothing wjec-eduqas
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  6. Merchant Of Venice wjec-eduqas
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  7. Othello wjec-eduqas
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  8. Twelfth Night wjec-eduqas
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  9. Poetry Anthology Overview wjec-eduqas
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  10. How To Answer The Poetry Anthology Questions wjec-eduqas
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  11. Poetry Anthology wjec-eduqas
    18 主题
  12. Post 1914 Prosedrama Overview wjec-eduqas
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  13. How To Answer The Post 1914 Prosedrama Question wjec-eduqas
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  14. An Inspector Calls wjec-eduqas
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  15. Anita And Me wjec-eduqas
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  16. The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night Time Playscript wjec-eduqas
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  17. Blood Brothers wjec-eduqas
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  18. Lord Of The Flies wjec-eduqas
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  19. The Woman In Black wjec-eduqas
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  20. Leave Taking wjec-eduqas
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  21. 19th Century Prose Overview wjec-eduqas
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  22. How To Answer The 19th Century Prose Question wjec-eduqas
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  23. A Christmas Carol wjec-eduqas
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  24. The Strange Case Of Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde wjec-eduqas
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  25. The War Of The Worlds wjec-eduqas
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  26. Jane Eyre wjec-eduqas
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  27. Silas Marner wjec-eduqas
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  28. Pride And Prejudice wjec-eduqas
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  29. Unseen Poetry Overview wjec-eduqas
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  30. How To Answer The Unseen Poetry Questions wjec-eduqas
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Exam code:C720

Characters

It is vital that you understand the way Shakespeare uses his two main characters in the play, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. However, understanding less prominent characters and, crucially, how they compare to the main characters, will lead to the very best responses. Below you will find character profiles of:

  • Macbeth

  • Lady Macbeth

  • Banquo

  • Macduff

  • The minor characters of the Three Witches and Malcolm

Macbeth

Illustration of a bearded man in profile, with short brown hair, wearing a green shirt, set against a simple white circular background.
Macbeth
  • The play’s tragic hero. This means:

    • He displays heroic characteristics

    • He has a fatal character flaw (hamartia): his ambition

    • Despite his hamartia, the audience does feel some sympathy for him

    • He is doomed to die at the end of the play

  • At the beginning of the play, Macbeth is presented as:

    • Brave: he is shown to be a fearless warrior (an “eagle” and a “lion” in battle)

    • Noble: it is reported that he has killed a traitor in battle, showing his loyalty to King Duncan and Scotland in general

    • Ambitious: unlike his comrade Banquo, he is easily seduced by the witches’ dangerous prophecies

    • Conscientious: he questions the morality of committing regicide, which leads Lady Macbeth to challenge his courage and manliness 

  • For Macbeth, there is a tension between the heroic and loyal aspects of his character and his ambition. This results in him questioning his actions repeatedly, but ultimately succumbing to his darker desires

  • As the play progresses, Macbeth becomes a less sympathetic character. He is shown to be:

    • Cruel: he murders his best friend, Banquo, and the wife and children of Macduff

    • Paranoid: he begins to suspect even innocent people are threats to his power, and even stops sharing things with Lady Macbeth (“full of scorpions is my mind”)

    • Guilty: his hallucinations represent his increasing feelings of guilt for the regicide and murder of Banquo

    • Masculine: he becomes the cruel, violent man that Lady Macbeth accuses him of not being, and becomes the dominant force in their relationship

    • Nihilistic: ultimately, he questions the pointlessness of life. For a Christian, Jacobean audience, this would be seen as disturbing

  • Despite his hamartia, and the barbaric villain Macbeth becomes, there are still reasons for an audience to feel sympathy for him:

    • He is tempted by evil witches

    • He is encouraged by a thoroughly unnatural woman, Lady Macbeth

    • He is thoroughly human: he is not pure evil, but a mixture of positive and negative character traits

    • This can be seen in his emotional reaction to his wife’s death and questioning of his own actions as a result (Act V, Scene V)

  • Even at the end of the play, he dies a warrior’s death, which could be seen by a Jacobean audience as heroic

For more on the key character of Macbeth, including key quotes and character development, click here.

Lady Macbeth

Illustration of a woman's profile with dark hair in curls, wearing a red headband and garment, inside a circular frame on a white background.
Lady Macbeth
  • At the play’s outset, Lady Macbeth is presented as:

    • Ambitious: she has a thirst for power unmatched even by Macbeth. She even calls on evil spirits to help her achieve it

    • Ruthless: she will do anything to gain this power. She lacks the conscience to question committing the mortal sin of regicide. She even says she would have “dashed the brains out” of her own baby if she had sworn to do so

    • Duplicitous: when welcoming Duncan to Dunsinane, she has no hesitation greeting him warmly, knowing full well he would be murdered that evening

    • Controlling: she plans to commit regicide, and she dominates her husband Macbeth when he questions it

  • She is also shown to be thoroughly untypical of a woman in the Jacobean era

  • Shakespeare presents her as a character who subverts the typical attributes of women of that time:

    • She is not dutiful: she does not do what her husband tells her and is not loyal to her king

    • She is not compassionate: she wants to stop herself from feeling remorse for evil acts

    • She is not nurturing: she wants to replace the mother’s milk in her breasts with “gall”: courage, or in its other meaning, poison

  • Lady Macbeth initially appears more single-minded and resolute than Macbeth:

    • She does not have the same feelings of doubt or pangs of conscience that Macbeth does

  • As the play progresses, Lady Macbeth loses control:

    • of her resolve: in Act V, she finally realises the true extent of her crime and its eternal consequences

    • of her relationship: Macbeth does not share his plans with her after Act II and becomes the dominant force in their relationship

    • of her mind

      • she begins hallucinating blood (a symbol of her responsibility and guilt for the murder of Duncan)

      • she cannot stop walking and talking in her sleep (sleep is a symbol of peace, so she is now never at peace) 

      • she is so tormented by guilt that she can no longer live with it and commits suicide

  • Shakespeare presents a role reversal in the traditional husband and wife relationship:

  • However, as the play progresses, Macbeth assumes the traditional, dominant role in their relationship

  • Shakespeare could be suggesting that because she is a woman, Lady Macbeth is less capable of handling the power that comes with being a king or queen

  • Shakespeare could also be comparing Lady Macbeth — as a woman — to the evil influence of the witches

  • She is ‘unnatural’, just like the witches are, because of her untypical attributes and her dominance over Macbeth

For more on the key character of Lady Macbeth, including an exemplar question paper and model paragraph, click here.

Banquo

Illustration of a bearded man in a brown robe, with short black hair, gazing to the right, enclosed in a circular frame.
Banquo
  • Banquo acts as a contrast to the character of Macbeth. In literature, this is known as being a foil:

    • A foil (Banquo) is used to contrast with the characteristics of a protagonist (Macbeth)

    • A foil, therefore, highlights character traits that are very particular to the protagonist that an author wants to explore

  • Banquo represents the typical behaviours and attitudes of the Jacobean era, the societal norms: 

    • Unlike Macbeth, he is very suspicious of the witches. After they give their first prophecies, Banquo appeals to “reason”

    • Unlike Macbeth, he is honest: he tells Macbeth that he had been dreaming about the witches. In response, Macbeth lies and tells Banquo he hadn’t given them any more thought

    • Unlike Macbeth, he is loyal: after Duncan’s murdered body is discovered, he vows to fight “treasonous malice”

    • Unlike Macbeth, he is devoutly Christian: he compares the witches to the Devil; after the regicide, he says “in the great hand of God I stand”

  • Because Banquo represents the societal norms, Shakespeare makes him rightly suspicious of Macbeth’s behaviour:

    • Immediately after meeting the witches, he thinks Macbeth is “rapt”, or spellbound

    • After Macbeth becomes king, he says that he believes Macbeth “played’st most foully for’t”: he thinks Macbeth got the crown by evil means

For more on the key character of Banquo, including key quotes and character development, click here.

Macduff

A man wearing a crown and medieval attire is surrounded by three witches in dark robes with grey hair, set against a circular background.
Other characters
  • In the play, Macduff acts as an avenging agent who stands in contrast to the villainous Macbeth

  • Like Banquo, he also represents the attributes a Jacobean audience would expect in a Scottish thane: 

    • He is noble: when told the news of the murder o

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