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Richard III - Act III, Scenes 5-7: The Propaganda Machine

William Shakespeare

Richard III

Act III, Scenes 5-7: The Propaganda Machine

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Act III, Scenes 5-7: The Propaganda Machine

Richard III by William Shakespeare

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With Hastings's blood still wet, Richard's propaganda machine launches at full force. He instructs Buckingham on the lies to spread at Guildhall: claim Prince Edward and his siblings are bastards because Edward had previous marriage contracts; paint Edward as lustful, forcing himself on citizens' wives and daughters; even suggest—carefully—that Edward himself was illegitimate, born while their father was in France (making Richard the true heir). 'Touch this sparingly,' Richard warns, 'because my mother lives.' A Scrivener appears with devastating evidence: he spent eleven hours writing Hastings's indictment, which was sent to him the night before. 'Yet within these five hours Hastings lived, untainted, unexamined, free, at liberty.' The execution was pre-planned—the 'trial' pure theater. 'Who is so gross that cannot see this palpable device? Yet who so bold but says he sees it not? Bad is the world... when such ill dealing must be seen in thought.' People see the manipulation but dare not speak. Buckingham returns from Guildhall: the citizens were silent as 'dumb statues,' refusing to cheer for Richard. Only a few of Buckingham's own plants shouted 'God save King Richard,' which Buckingham spun as 'general applause.' Now comes Richard's masterstroke of theater. Buckingham coaches him: 'Get a prayer book in your hand, and stand between two churchmen... be not easily won to our requests, play the maid's part, still answer nay.' When the Mayor arrives, Richard appears aloft between two bishops, prayer book in hand, the picture of piety. He pretends reluctance, feigns humility, performs deep religiosity—making the crown seem thrust upon him rather than seized by him. Every element is calculated theater designed to create the appearance of legitimate, reluctant succession while concealing the murders, lies, and manipulation that created this moment.

Coming Up in Chapter 13

Richard continues to justify his actions and position himself for the crown, using process and procedure to mask his true intentions.

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Original text
complete·1,760 words
E

nter Richard, and Buckingham, in rotten Armour, maruellous ill-fauoured.

Richard. Come Cousin,
Canst thou quake, and change thy colour,
Murther thy breath in middle of a word,
And then againe begin, and stop againe,
As if thou were distraught, and mad with terror?
Buck. Tut, I can counterfeit the deepe Tragedian,
Speake, and looke backe, and prie on euery side,
Tremble and start at wagging of a Straw:
Intending deepe suspition, gastly Lookes
Are at my seruice, like enforced Smiles;
And both are readie in their Offices,
At any time to grace my Stratagemes.
But what, is Catesby gone?
Rich. He is, and see he brings the Maior along.
Enter the Maior, and Catesby.

Buck. Lord Maior

Rich. Looke to the Draw-Bridge there

Buck. Hearke, a Drumme

Rich. Catesby, o're-looke the Walls

Buck. Lord Maior, the reason we haue sent

Rich. Looke back, defend thee, here are Enemies

Buck. God and our Innocencie defend, and guard vs.
Enter Louell and Ratcliffe, with Hastings Head.

Rich. Be patient, they are friends: Ratcliffe, and Louell

Louell. Here is the Head of that ignoble Traytor,
The dangerous and vnsuspected Hastings

1 / 11

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Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Recognizing Process Manipulation

Some manipulators use legitimate processes for illegitimate ends. This skill helps you recognize when process is a mask for manipulation.

Practice This Today

Examine whether processes are genuine or masks. Are meetings for discussion or announcement? Are procedures followed or weaponized? Watch for people who control process to control outcomes.

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"My lords, at once: the cause why we are met Is to determine of the coronation."

— Richard

Context: Richard opening the council meeting

Richard frames the meeting as a legitimate discussion about the coronation, but it's actually a stage for manipulation. The process masks the purpose.

In Today's Words:

We're here to discuss the leadership transition (but really I'm here to eliminate you)

"Here's a paper, Found in the pocket of the dead Hastings, That doth import the death of me and mine."

— Richard

Context: Richard using fabricated evidence to justify his actions

Richard creates false evidence to justify his tyranny. The document is fabricated, but the process makes it seem legitimate.

In Today's Words:

I have evidence (that I created) proving why I had to do this

Thematic Threads

Manipulation

In This Chapter

Process becomes a tool for manipulation

Development

Legitimacy masks illegitimacy

In Your Life:

Watch for people who use legitimate processes for illegitimate ends - they're using process as a weapon

Power

In This Chapter

Richard controls process to control outcomes

Development

Process becomes a form of control

In Your Life:

When someone controls process, they control outcomes - even when the process appears democratic

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You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    How does Richard use the council meeting process to advance his agenda? What makes this manipulation effective?

    analysis • deep
  2. 2

    What's the difference between legitimate process and process manipulation? How can you tell?

    reflection • medium
  3. 3

    Have you witnessed process manipulation? How was legitimate process used for illegitimate ends?

    application • surface

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

The Process Analysis

Richard uses legitimate process to mask manipulation. Think of a time when you saw process manipulation - when legitimate procedures were used for illegitimate ends.

Consider:

  • •How can you tell when process is genuine versus when it's a mask?
  • •What are the signs of process manipulation?
  • •How do manipulators control process to control outcomes?
  • •What can you do when you recognize process manipulation?

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you saw process manipulation. How was legitimate process used for illegitimate ends? How did you recognize it?

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Coming Up Next...

Chapter 13: Act III, Scene 7 (cont.): The Reluctant King

Richard continues to justify his actions and position himself for the crown, using process and procedure to mask his true intentions.

Continue to Chapter 13
Previous
Act III, Scene 3: Hastings' Execution
Contents
Next
Act III, Scene 7 (cont.): The Reluctant King

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