Romeo has snuck into Juliet’s orchard without anyone’s knowledge in the hope of seeing Juliet who suddenly appears and talks about her situation with her family name, Capulet, and her lover Romeo, whose family name is Montague, the sworn enemy of the Capulet family. Juliet suggests that Romeo gives up his family name so that they can be together, Romeo is more than willing to do so.
In class we concluded that language can affect our relationships and the social groups we belong to. We can see that this is also true in this passage where Juliet and Romeo’s family name decide what enemies they have once they are born, and without their opinions. For years their names have kept the two families’ relationship poor and it is because of the rigid concepts the two words hold that Romeo and Juliet cannot be together.
This scene suggests that a name is just a word to generally distinguish something from something else, for example a clock is just a general word used to identify an object that tells time, and nothing else about the clock. Therefore if a name should change, the personality and appearance of the thing will always remain the same and unchanged, as described by “that which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet”. This has taught me that there are limits to words as they only describe something generally and will never really reflect well enough how the thing actually is in reality.
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1 comment:
I think that it was well written and straight to the point which made it easy to understand. Out of the three tasks i liked the way you responded to the third one "reflects what its taught you about 'language' and 'words' in particular". The example you gave about"theclock is just a general word used to identify an object that tells time, and nothing else about the clock. Therefore if a name should change, the personality and appearance of the thing will always remain the same." this was a really good example and it made it very clear on the point you were trying to make.
Krriena Wadwani
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