Romeo and Juliet

1842 Words4 Pages

Love is an amazing feeling that constantly inspires people to admire it in literature, cinema, music and other kinds of art. Many literal works are devoted to the description of this overwhelming feeling and its development. However, there is not much told about various challenges and obstacles lovers have to come across. Both the "Twilight" by Stephenie Meyer and "Romeo and Juliet" by Shakespeare are great examples of love that is tested by various challenges and complications.

There simply is no more commonly quoted or alluded to dramatist or author in the Western world, nor a storyteller with more films to his individual credit. He helped to invent the modern English language and his dramatic corpus engulfs what is universal and essential in human philosophy, spirituality, and wisdom. His name itself is a metonym for artistic culture.

Romeo and Juliet is one of the world’s most famous love stories. It is a story of two star-crossed young lovers, whose families are engaged in a bitter feud. Romeo and Juliet is a story of young love and the obstacles two young people come across. This story is also an exploration of the willfulness of passion and the passionate nature of willfulness (Bloom, 2010). Such tragedy as Romeo and Juliet is world-famous and it is still performed on stage and in films. Besides, the Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare has been adapted for radio, television, opera, ballet, novels and other media many times (Naden, 2009). Besides, there are many fine movies that are based on this book and cannot leave the viewer indifferent. All these facts prove that there is some significant reason why this story of love remains some popular till nowadays. And the main reason is the great range of topics that cove...

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...love. He cares about Bella and her life and he threatened everyone that if Bella got damaged somehow he would revenge.

The twilight books confront love and death, and so much more, in a way that facilitates a strange recognition – that the dead are indeed wise, and that they are sometimes wise in matters of the heart, even when that heart doesn’t beat. The strange beauty of twilight lies here, as elsewhere: we are all faced with death, and we all desire to love (Housel & Wisnewski, 2009). In the world of Twilight, death is not inevitable, and the purest form of love seems to be found. Such a world not only allows an exploration of the human condition – facing our deepest and darkest fears, as well as our highest hopes (Housel & Wisnewski, 2009).

Stephanie Meyer's Twilight saga has maintained a tight grip on the contemporary culture's imagination (Wilson, 2011).

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