English Literature GCSE EDEXCEL
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Shakespeare Overview edexcel1 主题
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How To Answer The Shakespeare Questions edexcel6 主题
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Part A What The Question Is Asking edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Part A How To Get Full Marks edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Part A Mark Scheme And Model Answer edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Part B What The Question Is Asking edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Part B How To Get Full Marks edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Part B Mark Scheme And Model Answer edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Part A What The Question Is Asking edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth edexcel15 主题
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Macbeth Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Themes edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Key Theme Ambition edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Key Theme The Supernatural edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Key Theme Appearance Versus Reality edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Key Theme Corruption Of Nature edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Characters edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Character Analysis edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Key Character Profile Lady Macbeth edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Banquo Character Analysis edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Duncan Character Analysis edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Context edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Key Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Character Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Macbeth Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet edexcel15 主题
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Romeo And Juliet Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Themes edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Key Theme Love edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Key Theme Conflict edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Key Theme Honour edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Key Theme Fate edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Characters edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo Character Analysis edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Juliet Character Analysis edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Nurse Character Analysis edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Tybalt Character Analysis edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Context edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Key Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Character Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Romeo And Juliet Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing edexcel7 主题
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Much Ado About Nothing Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing Themes edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing Characters edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing Context edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing Key Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing Character Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Much Ado About Nothing Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night edexcel7 主题
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Twelfth Night Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night Themes edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night Characters edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night Context edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night Key Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night Character Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Twelfth Night Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice edexcel7 主题
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The Merchant Of Venice Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice Themes edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice Characters edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice Context edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice Key Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice Character Quotations edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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The Merchant Of Venice Plot Summary edexcel 1-Shakespeare
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Post 1914 Literature Overview edexcel1 主题
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How To Answer The Post 1914 Literature Question edexcel6 主题
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British Play What The Question Is Asking edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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British Play How To Get Full Marks edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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British Play Mark Scheme And Model Answer edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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British Novel What The Question Is Asking edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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British Novel How To Get Full Marks edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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British Novel Mark Scheme And Model Answer edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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British Play What The Question Is Asking edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls edexcel15 主题
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An Inspector Calls Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Themes edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Key Theme Responsibility And Guilt edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Key Theme Capitalism Vs Socialism edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Key Theme Class edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Key Theme Gender edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Characters edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Inspector Goole Analysis edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Arthur Birling Analysis edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Sheila Birling Analysis edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Eric Birling Analysis edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Context edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Key Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Character Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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An Inspector Calls Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm edexcel7 主题
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Animal Farm Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm Themes edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm Characters edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm Context edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm Key Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm Character Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Animal Farm Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers edexcel7 主题
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Blood Brothers Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers Themes edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers Characters edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers Context edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers Key Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers Character Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Blood Brothers Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies edexcel7 主题
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Lord Of The Flies Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies Themes edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies Characters edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies Context edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies Key Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies Character Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Lord Of The Flies Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me edexcel7 主题
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Anita And Me Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me Themes edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me Characters edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me Context edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me Key Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me Character Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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Anita And Me Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black edexcel7 主题
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The Woman In Black Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black Themes edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black Characters edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black Context edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black Key Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black Character Quotations edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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The Woman In Black Plot Summary edexcel 2-Post-1914-Literature
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19th Century Novel Overview edexcel1 主题
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How To Answer The 19th Century Novel Questions edexcel6 主题
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Part A What The Question Is Asking edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Part A How To Get Full Marks edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Part A Mark Scheme And Model Answer edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Part B What The Question Is Asking edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Part B How To Get Full Marks edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Part B Mark Scheme And Model Answer edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Part A What The Question Is Asking edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol edexcel15 主题
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A Christmas Carol Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Themes edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Key Theme Poverty edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Key Theme Family And Relationships edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Key Theme Transformation And Redemption edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Key Theme Death And Loss edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Characters edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Scrooge Character Analysis edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Bob Cratchit Character Analysis edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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The Three Spirits Character Analysis edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jacob Marley Character Analysis edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Context edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Key Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Character Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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A Christmas Carol Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Strange Case Of Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde edexcel7 主题
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Themes edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Characters edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Context edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Key Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Character Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice edexcel7 主题
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Pride And Prejudice Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice Themes edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice Characters edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice Context edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice Key Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice Character Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Pride And Prejudice Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner edexcel7 主题
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Silas Marner Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner Themes edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner Characters edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner Context edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner Key Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner Character Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Silas Marner Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein edexcel7 主题
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Frankenstein Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein Themes edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein Characters edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein Context edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein Key Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein Character Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Frankenstein Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations edexcel7 主题
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Great Expectations Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations Themes edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations Characters edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations Context edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations Key Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations Character Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Great Expectations Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre edexcel7 主题
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Jane Eyre Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre Themes edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre Characters edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre Context edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre Writers Methods And Techniques edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre Key Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre Character Quotations edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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Jane Eyre Plot Summary edexcel 3-19th-Century-Novel
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How To Answer The Poetry Anthology Question edexcel3 主题
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Relationships edexcel16 主题
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Relationships Poetry Overview edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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La Belle Dame Sans Merci edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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A Child To His Sick Grandfather edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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She Walks In Beauty edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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A Complaint edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Neutral Tones edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Sonnet 43 edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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My Last Duchess edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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1st Date She And 1st Date He edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Valentine edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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One Flesh edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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I Wanna Be Yours edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Loves Dog edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Nettles edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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The Manhunt edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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My Father Would Not Show Us edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Relationships Poetry Overview edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Conflict edexcel16 主题
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Conflict Poetry Overview edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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A Poison Tree edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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The Destruction Of Sennacherib edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Extract From The Prelude edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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The Man He Killed edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Cousin Kate edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Exposure edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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The Charge Of The Light Brigade edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Half Caste edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Catrin edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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War Photographer edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Belfast Confetti edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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The Class Game edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Poppies edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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No Problem edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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What Were They Like edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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Conflict Poetry Overview edexcel 4-The-Poetry-Anthology
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How To Answer The Unseen Poetry Question edexcel3 主题
Much Ado About Nothing Themes edexcel 1-Shakespeare
Exam code:1ET0
Themes
Exam responses that are led by themes are more likely to reach the highest levels of the mark scheme. Exploring the ideas of the text, specifically in relation to the question being asked, will help to increase your fluency and assurance in writing about the play.
Your exam question could be on any topic. However, having a really good grasp of the following themes and, importantly, why Shakespeare explores these themes, will enable you to produce a “conceptualised response” in your exam. This list is not exhaustive and you are encouraged to identify other ideas within the novel.
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Love
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Gender roles and attitudes
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Deception
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Honour and virtue
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Wordplay
Love

Much Ado About Nothing is fundamentally a romantic comedy, and the key theme of love is explored in the relationships between Claudio and Hero and Benedick and Beatrice. Paternal love is also demonstrated in Leonato’s relationship with Hero and Beatrice.
Knowledge and evidence
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The majority of the plot in Much Ado About Nothing revolves around Hero and Claudio as romantic leads:
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Claudio quickly falls in love with Hero, who is presented as innocent, pure and chaste
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His love for Hero is often regarded as superficial, and possibly motivated by money, as he enquires whether Leonato also has a son (who would inherit)
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Hero’s love for Claudio seems to be based on duty, as she is obeying her father’s wish for her to be married
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In Benedick and Beatrice, Shakespeare also presents us with two other romantic leads who love to hate each other:
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That they are tricked into loving each other is arguably only possible because that love already exists in their hearts
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They use their teasing and bickering to cover their true feelings
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Due to its flaws, their love seems to be more realistic than the relationship between Claudio and Hero, as they are more compelling and charismatic
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This is even though Benedick and Beatrice view love and marriage as a threat to freedom and free will
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Leonato demonstrates paternal love towards his daughter, Hero, and his niece, Beatrice:
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He wants them both to find suitable husbands, so he shows his love via his desire for them to be secure
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The preparations for marriage made by Leonato for Hero also suggest the theatrical nature of love:
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Like an actress, Hero has to be coached by Leonato before being proposed to
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Claudio’s dramatic decision to leave Hero at the altar is also overly theatrical, as is Leonato’s over-reaction
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Sexual love is also indicated through the relationship between Margaret and Borachio:
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However, this again appears to be superficial, as pretending Margaret to be Hero is more importantly a central plot device
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Throughout the play, love is linked to tricks, games and disguises:
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Hero is won for Claudio by Don Pedro in disguise
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Beatrice and Benedick are tricked into being together
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This suggests that love is a game and can be manipulated
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Individual characters are pieces in the game and can be moved and posed by others
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Beatrice compares love to a dance, presenting love as a series of steps or poses:
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This could explain why Beatrice eventually marries Benedick, as tricked or not, they have already gone through all the motions of the dance
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For Benedick, love is like war — a woman restricts a soldier’s freedom and adventure, and then cuckolds him for his efforts
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The metaphor of love as war is extended throughout the play:
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In Act 1 Scene 1, Leonato explains to the messenger that there is a “merry war” of wits between Beatrice and Benedick
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This sets up a metaphorical parallel between wars of weaponry and wars of wit and love that lasts throughout the play
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The schemes the characters play on each other are like military operations
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In Act 2 Scene 1, Beatrice uses a situation from naval warfare to ask why Benedick has not come to match wits with her
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Benedick erupts with frustration at Beatrice’s insults
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He complains that he feels like a man “with a whole army shooting at me” and that “every word stabs”
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In the final act, Benedick concludes that he and Beatrice are “too wise to woo peaceably”
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Don Pedro also speaks of love as though it is war, suggesting they are more similar in nature than Claudio thinks:
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Claudio and Hero contrast with this metaphor, as war is rough, whereas their love is seen to be soft and delicate
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Love in the play also often comes through imitation:
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Beatrice is inspired by Hero’s engagement
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Benedick’s annoyance with Claudio for falling in love suggests he is starting to feel the pressure to do the same
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Friar Francis’s suggestion to pretend that Hero was dead indicates that he believes that Claudio will love Hero more after her return from the dead:
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This suggests love is increased by overcoming obstacles
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Ultimately, love and hate are not that far apart, and love comes with great risk of shame
What is Shakespeare’s intention?
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Shakespeare appears to contrast a literary, romantic notion of love, via Hero and Claudio, with a more realistic version in the characters of Beatrice and Benedick
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The play starts with Benedick’s strong views about love and marriage, establishing the key theme and beginning the journey to the characters of Benedick and Beatrice changing their views
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Their relationship is shown in contrast to the speedy engagement of Claudio and Hero, who appear to have a lot to learn
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Claudio appears to fall in love with Hero because she fits an Elizabethan feminine ideal
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Therefore, Shakespeare may be suggesting that romantic love is blind, as Hero is quick to marry Claudio despite him publicly shaming her, and she never questions his motives
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The play also questions what people are prepared to do for love:
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Beatrice tests Benedick by asking him to kill Claudio
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But the ultimate message is that people can be changed by love, which conquers all
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This is why, despite an obvious plot parallel with Romeo and Juliet, the play ends well rather than tragically
Gender roles and attitudes

Whilst Much Ado About Nothing ends happily, it both reinforces and challenges traditional gender roles in its presentation of the female characters and of the male characters’ attitudes towards women
Knowledge and evidence
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The character of Hero represents a traditional portrayal of an Elizabethan feminine ideal, in which women are valued for their beauty and chastity, and rarely seen or heard in public:
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She conforms to this ideal in most of the play, with Shakespeare even employing the dramatic device of her fainting when accused of infidelity by Claudio at the altar
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Hero is treated poorly by Claudio, Don Pedro and even her father, Leonato:
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This is reflected in the bitterness and unpleasantness of the language used as Don John and Borachio plot against her and Claudio
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It is clear that she is expected to comply with her father’s wishes:
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She is treated as an object to be sold and lacks the voice to defend herself against incorrect accusations
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At the end of the play, Hero even ignores the fact that Claudio was so ready to believe the charges against her to marry him still
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She also never questions his motives for wanting to marry her, reinforcing both her innocence but also her complete submission to male authority
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Hero does not seem to be excited on her wedding day, as she states in Act 3 Scene 4: “God give me joy to wear it, for my heart is exceeding heavy”:
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The fact of her gender and position means that she has been told what to do by her father her whole life, and now she will be told what to do by her husband for the rest of her life
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The society in the world of Messina is strongly patriarchal, in which the head of the household is expected to take care of the family:
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Men hold positions of power and arguably have more freedom
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This is evidenced when Leonato is so ready to believe the words of men over his own daughter’s
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But the character of Beatrice challenges gender stereotypes, as she holds the more male characteristics of being outspoken, cynical and witty:
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She acknowledges the gender inequality inherent in marriage, saying that “Adam’s sons are my brethren” in Act 2 Scene 1
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She believes men and women to be equal, made of the same material (earth and dust)
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She is, therefore, unwilling to marry and have to be subservient to one of her equals
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Her frustration at her gender is most evident when Hero is abandoned at the altar, when she cries “O God that I were a man!”
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Benedick also worries about giving up his independence and freedom by getting married:
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Although Beatrice has more to lose, Shakespeare begins to draw parallels between the two characters
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They are an equal match as their courtship is a “merry war” of wit
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In Act 2 Scene 3, Balthasar’s song suggests that men should not have to change — women should just accept them as they are and should change themselves to accommodate them
What is Shakespeare’s intention?
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The subversion of traditional gender stereotypes in the character of Beatrice, and in Benedick’s eventual rejection of his male comrades in support of Hero, adds to the comedy of the play
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Elizabethan audiences would have been able to relate to both the literary models in the characters of Hero and Claudio, but also the more realistic Beatrice and Benedick
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Much of the comedy in the play results from the attitudes of the male characters
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The worthy attitudes of some of the male characters, such as Benedick and Dogberry, contrast with the objectification of Hero
Deception

Deception and disguise in Much Ado About Nothing are tools used for both good and bad, and Shakespeare even deceives his own characters through the use of dramatic irony, as the audience knows the truth throughout, even when the characters do not.
Knowledge and evidence
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This is a play full of falling for other people’s lies
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Don Pedro decides to help out Claudio by tricking Hero, telling him that “I will assume thy part in some disguise / And tell fair Hero I am Claudio”:
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But this mistaken identity at the masked ball causes confusion and upset, fuelled by Don John lying to Claudio that Don Pedro actually loves Hero and wants her for himself
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This is a failing on Claudio’s part, as being so easily manipulated into suspicion leaves him wide open to being deceived
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To get Benedick and Beatrice to fall in love, their friends and family deceive them into thinking they each have feelings for the other:
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The apparent enemies are actually in love
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Therefore, appearance and reality in the play are not always the same thing
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Eavesdropping is used as a dominant plot device, as almost everything happens because an eavesdropper heard about it:
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Borachio gives Don John a lot of information that he has overheard, but this is ironic as it is his own boasts that are overheard by the watchmen, leading to the plot being revealed
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Don John’s scheme to ruin Claudio and Hero’s wedding is based on deceiving Claudio and Don Pedro into believing that Hero has been unfaithful
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There is deception in the play right until the end, as Leonato’s “niece” is actually Hero in disguise
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Even the play’s title suggests a lot of fuss about empty rumours and deception
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Ironically, Don J
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