King Lear (The New Folger Library Shakespeare)
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Premium Content Sight and Consciousness: An Interpretive Study in King Lear

By Sonny Elizondo - August 05, 2000

The images of sight given, taken, or abused resonate deeply in King Lear from Kent's first imperative, "See better, Lear" (I.i.158), to the painful images of a stumbling, eyeless Gloucester. Such imagery, drawn both dramatically and verbally, illustrates well the theme of consciousness. Consciousness in this play refers to seeing the world without…

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