Influence of Niccolo Machiavelli’s Political Philosophy on Shakespeare’s characterization of King Richard III,
Presentation in Oxford Univ, UK, August 1, 2011
4. King Richard III (1452 - 1485) “Every tale condemns me for a villain”.
5. Influence of Machiavelli’s Political Philosophy “Learn how not to be good”: The ends justify the means A ruler must survive – do whatever it takes, moral or immoral, to get and retain the throne George is Richard’s first target Arranged to kill his brother with impunity! “Learn well to disguise true character: feign and pretend” Egregious pretence of a pious life of prayer and meditation Immediate switch back to accepting the throne when pressed
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7. Dilemma of Leadership If you have to commit immoral and evil acts to become a successful leader, how can you also be a good person? Richard does not triumph at the end Human instinct forces people to act in outrage when sufficiently provoked: Richard loses allies, family, and the audience Use good judgment to balance between Villain and Hero Shakespeare: Pride goeth before a fall!
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9. Leaders must learn from history, or be doomed to repeat the same mistakes
10. Richard loses good judgment and does not value the importance and responsibilities of being a true king
13. Epilogue Good ‘morrow my noble lords and ladies of class, Close reading, thrust stage, mixed metaphors, prolepsis ‘n puns, soliloquies alas, If blind ambition, cold conscience ‘ere guides for thee, What sort of king doth think you would be?