can the protagonists struggle be seen as symbolic of a larger class struggle?
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contrasted with a drawing of a violent protest There are two key ideas that underlie this theory of class struggle. First, Marx believed that production, or work, was the thing that gave life material meaning. Second is that we are by nature social animals.
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Yes, the protagonist's struggle be seen as symbolic of a larger class struggle
- The question has been asked from the literature of Macbeth by Shakespeare
- The protagonist engages in a power struggle that can be interpreted in a number of ways as a representation of a more general class struggle.
- Macbeth himself is an ambitious aristocrat who aspires to rule, which symbolises a struggle for dominance among the nobles.
- His actions and decisions have a significant impact on both the other nobles and the common people, who are affected by the disputes and political upheaval that arise after he assumes power.
- Furthermore, because everyone sought power in some way, the characters' battle is symbolic of a broader class conflict.
- They wanted wealth and the ability to be the person whom others looked up to and enviously admired.
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