Tragedy of Lady Macbeth In the book of Macbeth written by William Shakespeare, Macbeth a cruel and selfish man that wants to become king is forced to kill his noble kind known as Duncan. Macbeth’s wife Lady Macbeth forces Macbeth to kill Duncan to become king, Lady Macbeth is an insane and confused women she is suffering from bipolar disorder and Paranoid Schizophrenia. Bipolar Disorder is composed of distinct regions each made up of networks of nerve cells (neurons) the transmit message throughout the nervous system. Initial treatment for bipolar you'll need to start taking medications to balance your moods right away. Once your symptoms are under control, you'll work with your doctor to find the best long-term treatment. Paranoid Schizophrenia is a severe brain disorder in which people interpret reality abnormally. Schizophrenia may result in some combination of hallucinations, delusions, and extremely disordered thinking and behavior. Bipolar disorder is a major depression is characterized by several symptoms including a manic episode or a hypomanic episode. A …show more content…
Schizophrenia may result in some combination of hallucinations, delusions, and extremely disordered thinking and behavior. Lady Macbeth really shows paranoid schizophrenia in Act 5, scene 1, she says “ out, damn’d spot! Out, I say! One- Two- why then ‘tis to do it. Hell is murky. Fie, my lord, fie, a soldier, and afread? What need we fear who knows it, when none can call our pow’r to accompt? Yet who would have thought the old man to have so much blood in him?? “ Lady Macbeth shows schizophrenia by sleep walking and saying her hand will be stained forever and she will be haunted. She also admits that she has killed more than one person and talks about killing herself. Treatment for Schizophrenia involves medication and therapy to reduce risk of future psychotic episodes and improve
and Mrs. Macbeth’s characters seem to swap. Lady Macbeth has become this weak, stagnant creature. Only staring at walls, and rarely having anything to say. If there were psychiatric wards at this time, she would no doubt be placed in one. Her madness lead to suicide, which is probably the only cure for her sickness.
Macbeth goes into a berserk and crazed state, trying to communicate with this spiritual presence that no other guest is able to see. Research indicates that these episodes are not uncommon in the behavior of psychopaths. Distinctively violent behavior is known to occur during a manic episode (“Diagnostic and Statistical Manual”). This is yet another indication of Macbeth’s psychopathic mental state, which at this point is completely
During the reading of Macbeth, Lady Macbeth started showing signs of a couple different disorders. She showed a couple examples of panic disorder, while also showing multiple examples of post-traumatic stress disorder. Out of all the disorders that Lady Macbeth could be suffering from, I believe that these two best reflect Lady Macbeth’s problems. The first disorder that I looked into to try diagnosing Lady Macbeth is panic disorder. There is multiple times in the book where she says some things that make it seem like she is suddenly scared, or that she thinks there is serious danger.
Max Lerner an American Journalist stated “the turning point in the process of growing up is when you discover the core of strength within you that survives all hurt.” Throughout The Glass Castle a memoir by Jeannette Walls, Jeannette and her siblings, Lori, Brian and Maureen are faced with an unpleasant upbringing that they are put through by their parents Rex and Rose Mary Walls. Due to the terrible living conditions and bad parenting they had to endure for many years, they had to teach themselves and each other to be strong and survive on the very little food and necessities that they were given. Throughout the memoir, it is seen that Jeannette has a special connection with her father unlike any of the other siblings, but despite Jeannette believing in him Rex struggles to raise her and the kids in the normal life that they deserve due to his battle with mental illness. Bipolar disorder “is a brain disorder that causes unusual shifts in mood, energy, activity levels, and the ability to carry out day-to-day tasks” (National).
A bipolar disorder is a brain disorder that causes unusual shifts in mood, energy, activity levels, and the ability to carry out daily tasks. This is a serious disorder that can cause people people to be a risk to themselves as well as others. Being bipolar needs to be taken serious. First of all, a bipolar disorder tends to run in families. This means that if someone has a relative with a bipolar disorder then they are more likely to develop this illness.
1. Lady Macbeth would be diagnosed with OCD. OCD is a disorder that is defined by obsessions and compulsions that consume more than 1 hour per day or cause clinically significant distress or impairment. Obsessions include recurrent and persistent thoughts, urges, or images. In this case, Lady Macbeth worries that something really bad is going to happen to her or her family, and these thoughts overwhelm her mind throughout the day.
People in real life and also in every story, play, musicals, etc, all have certain characteristics about themselves. In the tragic play Macbeth by William Shakespeare and in the story Holinshed’s Chronicle by Raphael Holinshed paranoia is a huge trait in these works of Literature. Paranoia is when someone or even multiple people are worried that other people or even everyone will find out their big secret that they do not want anyone to know about them. Macbeth, Banquo, and basically everyone in real life show the traits of paranoia at one time or another in their lives. In the play tragedy play of Macbeth, Macbeth shows that he has the trait of paranoia many times throughout the play.
Shakespeare engineered a most impressionable character in Macbeth who easily succumbs to the extensive magnitude of opposing constraints. This character is Macbeth, who is the protagonist in the play and husband to a conniving wife, who in the end is the sole cause for Macbeth 's undoing. Conflicting forces in the play compel internal conflicts within Macbeth to thrive on his contentment and sanity as he his torn asunder between devotion, aspiration, morality and his very own being. He has developed a great sense of loyalty from being a brave soldier; however, his ambition soon challenges this allegiance. As his sincerity begins to deteriorate, his own sanity starts to disintegrate until the point where he cannot differentiate between reality
(Macbeth, Act II Scene II) Voices within his mind is the first symptom of schizophrenia that Macbeth presents in the play. However, the evidence of schizophrenia within the mind of Lord Macbeth does not end after the murder of Duncan, in fact it gets seemingly worse. Soon after the murder
Assuring their guests that all is well and that Macbeth’s episode will pass soon, and that they shouldn 't worry; while Macbeth is having a conversation with Banquo’s ghost that isn’t really there. Macbeth then confesses that “I have a strange infirmity, which is nothing to those that know me” (Shakespeare, 3.4.100-101). Therefore confirming that he does in fact have something wrong with him mentally that is most likely schizophrenia, due to the fact he sees hallucinations and that his paranoia has gotten much worse since he murdered King Duncan and
Macbeth and Madness Imagine the President of the United States admitting to having mental instability. This scenario may rattle some, but it clearly plays out in William Shakespeare’s tragedy, Macbeth. The play’s title character uses violence to maintain power but gradually plummets into mental illness. Before Macbeth and his wife, Lady Macbeth, conspire to murder his cousin Duncan, the King of Scotland, in order to attain authority, Macbeth foreshadows the possible repercussions; afterward, he experiences an immediate sense of remorse. The subsequent murder of a friend displays his progressive unsteadiness, but the massacre of an entire family demonstrates his transformation from instability to deviance.