Macbeth | Act3 Scene 4 | Line by Line Analysis | Nibblepop
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- Опубліковано 9 лют 2025
- Macbeth Act 3 Scene 4, popularly known as the Banquet scene shows Macbeth with his lords in a royal feast. He is visited by Banquo's ghost. The scene shows Macbeth's shock and his subsequent reaction to the uncanny incident and ends with his decision to revisit the weird sisters. This video is a detailed line-by-line explanation and analysis of this very important scene. A must-watch for the students of literature.
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Monami Mukherjee, working as Assistant professor of English at Hingalganj Mahavidyalaya, has a teaching experience of over 15 years. She got her education at Lady Brabourne College and University of Calcutta. She completed her MPhil from Calcutta University and has worked in St Xavier’s Institution, Panihati Mahavidyalaya and Hingalganj Mahavidyalaya. She has delivered invited talks in Post Graduation Classes at Lady Brabourne College and Taki Government College. She takes special interest in issues of Feminism, Post-colonialism and Modernism. She is known for her conversational style of teaching and grasp of core concepts in literature.
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Students of English Literature can get free class lectures and learning resources along with other relevant issues. Best suited for English Honours and Masters (All Universities), ISC, NET, SSC. The lessons explain critical theories in easy language for all categories of students.
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Mam your channel is the only one which I came across for such a good teaching of literature. Your way of teaching surpasses even the teachings of the school one .👏👏👏
Incredible style of teaching..Hoping to score best in isc 2025 from ur teachings..
I just figured out why the banquet scene is my favorite of all Shakespeare... it's because you learn that Shakespeare has rules, rules like "when he talks a line or two to himself, that's an "aside." When he talks to himself for a long time, that's a "soliloquy," and when he talks to someone else for a long time, that"s a "monologue." When he talks to the murderers, it's like an aside in that it's information useful to the audience, but nothing you'd actually want the other characters to overhear, and when he freaks out and starts screaming at Banquo's Ghost, that's the sort of soliloquy that you would never, ever want to be a monologue. The rules of civilization, of nature, and even of Shakespearian plays themselves are all inverted.
What?
@@lavanayanahata436 what's confusing?
Oh.. what an episode and what an explanation.. it was like i was visualizing the drama while listening.. it was so lucid and lively.. the impromptu expressions, intonations.. loved it
The nature of Banquo's murder, multiple head wounds, is *fascinating* in light of your hypothesis of the Porter scene, where all of the Porter's hell-guests are aspects of Macbeth's villainy. When a person is attacked multiple times in the face, the attack is almost certainly by an intimate partner or very close friend. It is as if the unnamed murderers *are* Macbeth, or are personifications of his murder weapons, the blood on their faces being like the blood on the dagger. That Macbeth is happy to see a hired killer show up at a state dinner with blood on his face is a clue that something is either very symbolic or very wrong... or both.
Wao, i have never seen such keen observation and yet with such simplicity that anyone hearing would exclaim "hell why didn't I see it".
So grateful to have you onboard.
Gonna write it in my exam .. thanks for this 😭❤️
bumbaclart
Wonderful explanation ma'am, you are an excellent teacher and have a perfect accent👍✨✨
Believe me , Mam you are not only a good teacher but also a good actor.
loved the video
best explanation 🥰🥰
thanks maam for the lecture
Hats off to you Ma'am ❤....
Superb class
Great 🎉
How many times ghost appears?
I thought my voice had fully recovered from COVID-19, but I made the mistake of reading the part where Macbeth totally looses his mind and starts growling, the "rugged Russian bear, an armor-plated rhinoceros, or a Hyrcan tiger" lines. My dog loved it, knowing it was a play growl, but I really shouldn't have over-pronounced the R's so much. :(
Which breed? Your dog?
@@NibblePop I call her a Macro Pincher. She's half miniature pincher, half something else, so she's about 10kg and twice the size of a miniature pincher, but is otherwise the same shape and color. She's very sweet and very smart. Because she has a littermate brother who's piebald, about 2kg bigger, and not nearly as sweet, she knows that "little girl" or "good girl" applies to her, so when I growled out "the baby of a girl," she became very excited and very kissy.
On a related note... this might just be Orwell's 1984 rattling around my head with the Newspeak use of negations like "ungood" and "unperson," but I'm while I'm thinking Shakespeare just used "unreal mockery" to give himself one more R, I'm thinking Eliot agrees with you that Inverness is Hell, because in comparing London to Hell in "The Waste Land," he calls it "Unreal City."
Oh, I completely forgot that my dog is in this video: ua-cam.com/video/9xEYtJnUGc4/v-deo.html
How many times banquo's ghost appears in macbeth?
Mam, in 20:43, we see Lady M to be told about the dagger by Macbeth. Here you have said that probably lady M had come to know about the hallucination regarding the dagger after the banquet scene but this current scene is actually Banquet Scene so how Lady M came to know beforehand about the hallucination of Macbeth in the running Banquet scene ?
Very well explained ma’am ❤️❤️
First comment, probably. You are very sound with the technology, I suppose. Thank you, mam. These are extremely helpfull. Are you planning Pope's rep of the lock?
Yes. Rape of the Lock is definItely there in short term plan. Very soon.
Team effort.
@@NibblePop thank you, mam. I never expected that a professor from English department like you will teach this way in youtube, that's why I'm so happy about it. Tysm.
Did lady macbeth know about banquo's prophecy ?
Not specified in the text. There is no textual evidence. So we may assume she did not. In the letter, Macbeth only told about his own prophecies
Thank you so much Ma'am.
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