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GCSE/English Literature/OCR

C02.B.M1Romeo and Juliet — extract-based question + whole-play essay

Notes

Romeo and Juliet — William Shakespeare (c.1594–96)

Romeo and Juliet is OCR's most popular early Shakespeare text for Component 02 Section B. Expect an extract-based question (15 marks) and a whole-play essay (25 marks). AO4 (SPaG) is also assessed. The play is studied for its dramatic methods, the construction of love and conflict, and its Elizabethan context.

Context — essential for AO3

Elizabethan context (c.1595):

  • Patriarchal society: daughters were property of their fathers; Juliet's refusal to marry Paris is a radical act of defiance. Lord Capulet's rage in Act 3 ("I tell thee what — get thee to church o' Thursday") reflects the Elizabethan assumption of absolute parental authority.
  • Marriage and family honour: in Verona (and Elizabethan England), family honour was paramount; the feud between Capulets and Montagues is not irrational — it is how honour culture operated.
  • Fate and Providence: Elizabethans believed in Providence (God's plan); the Prologue explicitly calls Romeo and Juliet "star-crossed lovers" — suggesting fate, not chance, drives their deaths. The audience knows the ending before the play begins.
  • Death and religion: suicide was a mortal sin in Elizabethan theology. Both Romeo and Juliet die by their own hand — a transgression that would have shocked the audience morally, intensifying their tragedy.
  • Sources: Shakespeare based the play on Arthur Brooke's poem The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet (1562). By compressing the timeline from months to days, he increased dramatic intensity.

The Prologue: framing the tragedy

The Prologue (a sonnet — 14 lines, ABAB CDCD EFEF GG) does unusual work:

  • It tells the audience everything: the lovers will die; the feud will end with their deaths.
  • This creates dramatic irony throughout — the audience knows what the characters do not.
  • "A pair of star-crossed lovers take their life" — "star-crossed" means doomed by the stars/fate; "take their life" is deliberately ambiguous (they take life = they live, AND they take their own lives = they die).
  • Shakespeare makes the audience complicit in watching a tragedy they know is coming — this heightens the sense of inevitability and pathos.

Key themes

Love: Shakespeare presents multiple kinds of love in contrast:

  • Romantic/courtly love: Romeo's love for Rosaline (Act 1) is performative; he uses stock Petrarchan clichés ("She is the sun"). Shakespeare deliberately shows this as not genuine love.
  • Transformative love: Romeo and Juliet's love is presented as real, immediate, and transcendent — and also dangerously irrational.
  • Parental love: Lord Capulet claims to love Juliet but treats her as property; the Nurse's love is practical and earthy (she was Juliet's wet-nurse).

Conflict: the play weaves personal and familial conflict throughout:

  • The feud is presented as arbitrary and destructive — Benvolio and Romeo want peace; Tybalt and Capulet want war.
  • Shakespeare uses contrast: the lovers' private world of love vs the public world of male honour, violence and feud.

Fate vs free will: the tension between fate (the stars, the Prologue's prediction) and the characters' choices is central. Romeo and Juliet make choices that accelerate their deaths — yet the Prologue insists the outcome was always fixed.

Key characters and dramatic functions

CharacterFunction
RomeoTragic hero: impulsive, passionate; his haste (marrying, killing Tybalt, suicide) drives the plot
JulietMore emotionally intelligent than Romeo; her language is more controlled; she is also more aware of risk
Friar LawrenceCatalyst: marries them; devises the plan; his message fails. Represents the failure of good intentions; raises question of adult responsibility
TybaltConflict; male honour culture; foil to Benvolio; his death is the pivot of the play
The NurseComic register; contrast to romantic idealism; her practical advice (marry Paris) shows limits of earthly love
Lord CapuletPatriarchal authority; his treatment of Juliet shows how the older generation destroys the younger

Key dramatic techniques

  • Soliloquy: Juliet's "Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds" (Act 3, Sc 2) — anticipation of wedding night; her language becomes passionate and urgent. Reveals private desire.
  • Dramatic irony: the audience knows Romeo is banished, not dead, when Juliet mourns; the audience knows Juliet is not dead when Romeo drinks poison.
  • Oxymoron: "O brawling love, O loving hate" — Romeo's language in Act 1 is full of contradictions; oxymoron captures the paradox of love and conflict coexisting.
  • Light and dark imagery: developed throughout. Juliet is "the sun"; Romeo will "not be Romeo" in darkness. Light represents love but also danger (light exposes them to their families).
  • The balcony scene (Act 2, Sc 2): the spatial separation — Romeo below, Juliet above — is both literal (garden vs window) and metaphorical (earth vs heaven; mortal vs transcendent). Juliet's line "What's in a name?" is a philosophical challenge to the feud's logic.

Common OCR exam mistakes

  1. Focusing on Romeo and ignoring Juliet's dramatic function — Juliet is equally important and arguably more complex.
  2. Not using the Prologue for AO2 — it is a sonnet; the form is significant; the dramatic irony it creates shapes every scene.
  3. Confusing oxymoron with paradox — oxymoron is a specific rhetorical figure (two contradictory words side by side: "loving hate"); paradox is a broader logical contradiction.
  4. Quoting the balcony scene without analysing the dramatic staging — OCR expects awareness of how the scene would work on stage, not just the words.
  5. Ignoring Friar Lawrence's role — he is an adult who enables the marriage and whose plan fails. His role invites analysis of adult responsibility vs fate.

Worked exampleWorked example: AO2 + AO3 paragraph

How does Shakespeare use language to present Romeo and Juliet's love as transcendent?

Strong paragraph: At the balcony, Romeo's language elevates Juliet beyond the earthly: "It is the east, and Juliet is the sun" — the metaphor replaces the cold, absent moon (which Romeo has previously associated with inconstancy) with the sun, the source of all warmth and life. The substitution is theologically charged for an Elizabethan audience: the sun was understood as a divine creation, God's light. To make Juliet the sun is to make her sacred — love here is not merely romantic but a form of worship. Shakespeare contrasts this with Romeo's earlier Petrarchan clichés about Rosaline, where love was performance; now the language is urgent, unrehearsed, reaching for cosmic scale. This elevation of earthly love to the divine is precisely what makes the tragedy: their love cannot survive in the world of the feud.

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-english-literature

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 134 marks

    Romeo and Juliet: love and conflict

    How does Shakespeare present the theme of love in Romeo and Juliet?

    Write about:

    • The ways love is presented
    • How Shakespeare uses language, form and structure to present love

    [30 marks + 4 marks AO4 SPaG]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-english-literature

  2. Question 225 marks

    Fate and free will

    "In Romeo and Juliet, the lovers are victims of fate, not their own choices." How far do you agree?

    [25 marks]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-english-literature

  3. Question 315 marks

    Tybalt and conflict

    How does Shakespeare use Tybalt to present the theme of conflict?

    [15 marks]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-english-literature

  4. Question 48 marks

    The Prologue: dramatic function

    Explain how Shakespeare uses the Prologue to shape the audience's experience of Romeo and Juliet. [8 marks]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-english-literature

  5. Question 55 marks

    Juliet: agency and constraint

    How does Shakespeare present Juliet as a character who both accepts and resists the constraints of her society? [5 marks]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-english-literature

Flashcards

C02.B.M1 — Romeo and Juliet — extract-based question + whole-play essay

10-card SR deck for OCR English Literature (J352) topic C02.B.M1

10 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)