The Lady's Not for Burning Literary Elements

The Lady's Not for Burning Literary Elements

Genre

Romantic Comedy

Language

English

Setting and Context

In the Middle Ages, around 1400 (" either more or less or exactly" as the play says)

Narrator and Point of View

Told from a third person point of view

Tone and Mood

Exhausting, Sad, Violent, Comedic, Dark, Chaotic, and Mysterious

Protagonist and Antagonist

Thomas Mendip (Protagonist) vs. the oppressive society he lives in (Antagonist)

Major Conflict

Initially, Thomas' struggle to get killed. Later, his struggle to fit in despite a society which is oppressive and cruel.

Climax

When Thomas and Jennet escape into the night.

Foreshadowing

Thomas and Jennet's arrest is foreshadowed quite early on in the play.

Understatement

The extent and severity of Thomas' mental illness is understated.

Allusions

To history (of the 1400's and the Salem Witch Trials, primarily), geography, religion, mythology, and popular culture.

Imagery

Fry uses intense imagery to underscore the oppressiveness and strangeness of the time and place which Thomas lives.

Paradox

Thomas is a downtrodden and suicidal man, yet he wants to get with Jennet, who is accused of being a Witch.

Parallelism

Jennet's story is paralleles quite nicely with the Salem Witch Trials, in which accused witches were imprisoned and then drowned.

Personification

N/A

Use of Dramatic Devices

Fry uses stage directions to help the reader understand the setting much better.

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