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Do not take your dad to a production of King Lear on Father's Day. Actually, don't take your mom to see it on Mother's Day, for that matter. (Characters who are mothers, as several critics have pointed out, are noticeably absent in King Lear—but there's plenty of talk about moms in this play.)
Lear is not only a king, he's also a family patriarch whose plans to divvy up his kingdom among his daughters backfires, causing a civil war that gets played out as a large scale family crisis. Lear's family isn't the only dysfunctional crew in the play—the drama between Gloucester and his sons heightens the sense that King Lear is a decidedly domestic tragedy.
Questions About Family
- Why does King Lear stage a love test between his daughters?
- Why does King Lear banish Cordelia? Is he justified?
- Explain how Goneril and Regan betray their father after he retires.
- How does King Lear's quarrel with his family play out on a national scale?
- Why is Edmund out to destroy his father and his half-brother, Edgar?
Chew on This
In King Lear, the aging monarch's crisis of kingship is played out as a distinctly family matter—in the play, civil warfare is literally a family squabble and Lear's most disloyal subjects are his unruly daughters.
Edmund's wicked actions are not those of a motiveless man—he sets out to destroy his father and half-brother because he objects to society's treatment of illegitimate and second-born sons.