Writing of Shakespeare 's plays is imitation, whether positive or negative. This can be done directly through dialogue and character dialogue, or abstract through the use of symbols and themes. One of the most common ways by William Shakespeare to convey social outlook is due to the different role of the hero. In many literary works, especially classical tragedies, one person can not achieve perfection. Even simple ones like characters do in the past, flawed personality traits, and physical quality, they fail.
Lack of affiliation may adversely affect sex. The poem "Felicks Skrzynecki" is exploring the difficulty of integration into modern Australian society. The personality in the poem can not be tied to his past legacy, reusing the proper pronoun "he", "his garden", "his friend of Polish", and "his house" You can not. Futurized father and son are highlighted by the emotional similarity of "Love his garden like an only child". The strong juxtaposition of both highlights the difference between them and the struggle of the hero. He is caught between the two cultures, his Polish heritage and the Australian society, I do not know what he belongs to; "He taught me the rest of the language I inadvertently took over ". The main character "Felicks Skrzynecki" of this poem is psychologically hurt because I do not know where I belong and where I belong.
The above explanation about consciousness is a conscious factual condition, but there is still a problem. The problem is how people interact with the outside world and society by consciously showing and holding his personality. According to Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, this role is the mask the individual wears to hide the true self (Maverick, 2010, ΒΆ 1). Therefore the role can conclude that people are the way to show their personality to his society based on what he wants others to see him.
The public role is like advertising yourself. The more desirable your public role is, you can create more products you want people like. You will receive a higher rating. This is how we socialize. The more we respect and respect our general image, the more we can move forward. I understand the motivation behind creating a strong public image. We are often afraid of being seen by who we are. We do not believe that we truly like us. I think we will be dismissed or discarded (in some cases it may be). So we built these perfect public roles and kept themselves from being discovered as our own true self.