Act 2 Lit. Skill
Act 2 Lit. Skill
Act 2 Lit. Skill
Act Two
Standards Focus: Character Map
Directions: There are numerous characters in Julius Caesar, which can make reading and
following the plot quite confusing. Complete the Character Map below as much as you can from the
information you have been given in Acts One and Two. As you read the rest of the play, fill in each
blank with the names of other characters. When you finish reading the play, your Character Map
should be complete.
Julius Caesar
Put to death
Conspirators
Collateral damage
Die in _________________________________
battle
_________________________________
_________________________________
In a play, there is often very little direct characterization. We learn about the characters through their
dialogue; therefore, much of the character development comes from what characters say about each other or
what they say about themselves through indirect characterization.
Motivation is what drives a character to do what they do. In other words, ask yourself: what is this
characters strongest desire? Characters decisions are important to the plot, and in many cases, their
decisions will affect the plays outcome. Just as we can tell a great deal about a person by the way he or she
lives his or her life, we can also learn a lot about characters by what they say and do. Similarly, just as some of
the decisions we make in our lives are minor and trivial, and others change our lives forever, a skilled writer
develops characters that also make both seemingly unimportant as well as life-altering choices.
Directions: For each of the characters below, complete the chart with textual examples of indirect
characterization from Act One or Two of the play. First, find a quote in which another character describes
something about that character, and then find a quote in which the character describes himself. Be sure to
give scene and line numbers from where you obtained the quote. Then in your own words, fill in what you
think is the characters main motivation this far in the play. An example has been done for you.
Character Brutus
Another Brutus, I do observe you now of late. / I have not from your eyes that gentleness / And show of love as I
Characters was wont to have. / You bear too stubborn and too strange a hand / Over your friend that loves you.
Description (Act I, Scene ii, lines 32-36)
Cassius, / Be not deceived. If I have veiled my look, / I turn the trouble of my countenance / merely
Description of
upon myself. Vexed I am / Of late with passions of some difference, / Conceptions only proper to
Himself
myself, / Which five some soil, perhaps, to my behaviors. (Act I, Scene ii, lines 36-42)
While Brutus likes Caesar, and is his friend, he does not think that Caesar is the best ruler of Rome. His
Motivation heart is with his people, and he fears Caesar is a tyrant. His main motivation is to see that his people are
not harmed, which means that he must remove Caesar from power any way he can.
Description
of Himself
Motivation
Character Cassius
Another
Characters
Description
Description
of Himself
Motivation
Character Antony
Another
Characters
Description
Description
of Himself
Motivation
Character Casca
Another
Characters
Description
Description
of Himself
Motivation