One of the beautiful things about stories are their underlying lessons, morals, or critiques. Teaching students to identify these hidden messages brings greater depth to their literary experiences, and storyboarding is a great way to teach these concepts. It allow the visuals or symbols to tell the stories, making the ideas easy for students to comprehend.
This play is about two star-crossed lovers from feuding families, who take their own lives. Through a series of unfortunate events, fate and chance turn against the lovers. Romeo, a Montague, and Juliet, a Capulet, marry in secret, but are soon separated. The two die tragically in one of the most famous examples of dramatic irony.
Storyboard That has a few different layouts available for your storyboards. The grid layout is a format option that compares items across two axes. Grids are often the best choice for storyboards with lots of information, because grids are organized in a matrix.
Romeo and Juliet Symbolism, Imagery, & Motifs definition and examples
Storyboard Text
LIGHT VS. DARK IMAGERY
Throughout the play light and dark imagery is repeated
EXAMPLE 1
EXAMPLE 2
DREAMS
Dreams are seen as an attempt to escape from reality.
Darkness helps to conceal the secret love of Romeo and Juliet.
Common connotations of darkness are evil or death, as in the final scene when Romeo and Juliet die in a dark tomb.
In the play, the idea that dreams are only fantasies is most visible in Mercutio’s "Queen Mab" speech.
Romeo, the dreamer, quickly falls hopelessly in love. Mercutio can’t help but create a satire around this idea.
POISON
Poison appears twice in the play; each time as a way to end a problem.
Friar Lawrence says everything has its purpose and that things are only made evil by human hands. The man-made poison that will make Juliet appear dead is evil.
Romeo visits an apothecary. He buys a lethal poison that ends his life.