[
    {
        "name": "Malladi, Chaitanya Lakshmidhar",
        "degree": "Other",
        "year": "2015",
        "title": "Shakespeare\u2019s Crafting of the Ideal King in Henry V",
        "advisor": "Unknown, Unknown",
        "url": "https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04062016-111338363",
        "creators": [
            {
                "name": {
                    "family": "Malladi",
                    "given": "Chaitanya Lakshmidhar"
                },
                "id": "Malladi-Chaitanya-Lakshmidhar",
                "display_name": "Malladi, Chaitanya Lakshmidhar"
            }
        ],
        "advisors": [
            {
                "name": {
                    "family": "Unknown",
                    "given": "Unknown"
                },
                "display_name": "Unknown, Unknown"
            }
        ],
        "committee": [
            {
                "name": {
                    "family": "Unknown",
                    "given": "Unknown"
                },
                "display_name": "Unknown, Unknown"
            }
        ],
        "option_major": [
            "bioeng"
        ],
        "doi": "10.7907/2B07-N545",
        "abstract": "[Introduction] In Shakespeare\u2019s history Henry V, the playwright depicts the reign of King Harry\u2014\r\nspecifically with respect to his claim to the throne of France and his subsequent invasion. In the\r\nprequel to this play, Henry IV, Harry is shown as an impetuous young boy who engages in\r\nmischief around town with his immature friends. However, by the end of the first part of Henry\r\nIV, Harry matures and becomes a brave, strong warrior on the battlefield as well as a courageous,\r\nhonorable man. He is ultimately portrayed as the rightful heir to the throne. At the beginning of\r\nHenry V, the audience sees a mature king who has been in charge of the kingdom for some time\r\nalready. While Shakespeare bases his plays on historical events as documented in works like\r\nRaphael Holinshed\u2019s Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland, the playwright uses his\r\nliterary liberty to alter the chronological order of events and even sometimes the actions that\r\ncertain characters take or do not take. Shakespeare\u2019s dramatization of several historical elements\r\nof Holinshed serves to aggrandize the glory and maturity of Henry V as a just, idealized king;\r\nwith his decisions to change what is written in the history books, Shakespeare highlights the king\u2019s military aptitude, his modesty in dealing with his soldiers and citizens, and his political\r\nsavviness."
    }
]