What are the other themes of Romeo & Juliet besides love and death?

What are the other themes of Romeo & Juliet besides love and death?

It's too late for you. Work on your chemistry homework instead.

There is no human work of art that isn't about love and/or death.

One of the most important themes of the play is that you should do your own homework.

Nigga how're you going to learn anything if you get us to do it for you?

Coincidentally, a theme is the stupidity of teenagers.

Kæk

church oppression (of science: using it for evil potionmaking; of people: manipulating information for personal benefit i.e. Friar Laurence wanted Romeo for himself)
Faust paralelles (Benvolio encourages Romeo to go meet Juliet in the first place, Romeo accepts, selling his soul to Benvolio i.e. the Devil)
struggle with chronic illness and the necessary lifestyle adaptations (Juliet has a nurse in her bedroom almost the entire time)
oppression of the non-gender-binary (Mercutio dies because he was caught in the middle of a conflict between Masculinity (House of Montague) and Femininity (House of Capulet)

thank you so much you gave some new ideas to complite my short-essay on R & J.

>> It's too late

i have to do this for the 2 of June.

just to clarify, those aren't really the themes.

Spooks

Names
Literature, a lot of references and metaphors involving books, writing, language, etc. The importance of verbal actions. The community kills the challenge to social construction of language.
Love
Love as religion/idolatry (see Jorge Luis Borges on Dante)
Fate/chance vs free will
Stars (representatives of Fate)
Light vs darkness/night (night = private world, light = society, law, tradition)
Silver vs gold
Youth vs age/old people
Time

yes, but i just needed to find some new reflections. I haven't to develop those too much.

This is bullshit.

>Names
>Literature, a lot of references and metaphors involving books, writing, language, etc. The importance of verbal actions. The community kills the challenge to social construction of language.
>Love
>Love as religion/idolatry (see Jorge Luis Borges on Dante)
>Fate/chance vs free will
>Stars (representatives of Fate)
>Light vs darkness/night (night = private world, light = society, law, tradition)
>Silver vs gold
>Youth vs age/old people
>Time

but this is not

Agree, but don't know why you mention it since I didn't say anything about that post.

What do you mean gold vs silver?

>The "infinite" nature of true love is repeated. Similar motif in Anthony and Cleopatra opening. "Boundlessness versus limitation is a key dialectic for Shakespeare in every sphere (language, politics, mortality, sexual passion, geography, stagecraft, etc.). In Romeo and Juliet, which we have seen to be an exceptionally well-crafted play, the material worth of “gold” and its limitations as lucre, ornament, and literal status symbol are measured against another kind of quality, associated with the quicksilver Mercutio and with the element of silver in the play. It is not overstating the case to say that gold versus silver constitutes another of the play's defining feuds, and that the critique of gold leads to the stunning climax/anticlimax of the final scene, in which Capulet and Montague, having apparently learned nothing from their losses, vie to build golden statues, each for the other's dead child."

i didn't understand too

>church oppression (of science: using it for evil potionmaking; of people: manipulating information for personal benefit i.e. Friar Laurence wanted Romeo for himself)

Shakespeare was a crypto-Catholic you dumb nigger.

This user is literally retarded and has literally no idea what he's talking about, so you should definitely and literally use what he said.

...

Nice, source on this? Would like to read more.