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Coriolanus: Punishment of the Civil Body: Coriolanus: Punishment of the Civil Body

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William Shakespeare
About 27 pages (8,042 words)
Coriolanus (play) Summary

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William M. Hawley

A skilled practitioner of martial law, Coriolanus ultimately favors the emancipation of peace over war. Convicted of treason in disparate jurisdictions, though, he dies for having twice outlived his usefulness as a warrior. He remains unreflective about death and never questions or alters the hypotheticals leading to his destruction, unlike Hamlet or Macbeth. His hatred of theatrical shows only makes his performance all the more arresting. Because Rome and Antium mete out excessive punishments against him for imperfectly conceived reasons of social hygiene, social cohesion is maintained in two civil arenas without its raison d'être of achieving permanent reform or emancipation.

This is a free excerpt of 104 words. There are 8,042 words (approx. 27 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Coriolanus: Punishment of the Civil Body: Coriolanus: Punishment of the Civil Body from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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