Leadership; Management Skills

 

 

Management Skills: Essay about a fictional movie character in a management position

 

 

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Leadership; Management Skills

Many viewers of fictional characters focus on engaging traits to capture the attention of the whole story. Fictional management character has several traits such as patient, grossness, perseverance, courage, kindness, wisdom, and dedication. I believe choosing James Bond as a fictional character will be effective in explaining the personality and leadership traits he possesses. In all James Bond movies, James Bond, as a character, is in a management position. He is a guy who gets things done. Some of his strengths and traits that makes him a leader and a manager include: lateral thinking and problem solving – when faced with a challenge, Bond doesn’t give up, but instead quickly thinks of an alternative solution to the problem. Think of the way Sean Connery, as Bond, takes out Oddjob in Goldfinger by electrocuting him through his hat via the metal bars in Fort Knox; creativity and entrepreneurial spirit – linked to the above point, Bond exhibits his creative and entrepreneurial flair by thinking outside of the box to create a solution to a problem.

1th Century Scotland was deemed a very much patriarchal society. There was a clear concept of hierarchy in society, which Shakespeare demonstrates at different points within the play. The witches have been said to represent women’s attempt to gain power in a society that’s set up to give power only to men. In Jacobean society, women would have been towards the bottom of the Chain of Being and certainly below men. Similarly to Lady Macbeth in act 1 scene 5, the Witches endeavour to make appear increasingly manly in an attempt to acquire more power. Shakespeare gives the characters of the witches beards (You should be women, yet your beards forbid me to interpret that you are so’) to symbolise this desire. Macbeth’s hallucinations, or visions present the impact of the supernatural. One example of a hallucination is when Macbeth asks, ‘Is this a dagger which I see before me’. The fact that Macbeth is seeing a floating dagger, in his mind is another demonstration of the supernatural. Here, the supernatural is essentially pressing Macbeth to murder Duncan. Shakespeare could be purposefully highlighting how evil the supernatural is as it is not only telling him to kill – but commit the act of regicide, which in the 11th Century, was possibly the worst crime anyone could commit, along with communicating with the supernatural. During Macbeth’s soliloquy he questions if the dagger is just ‘a dagger of the mind’ or a ‘false creation’. This causes Macbeth to question his own psychological state and whether the dagger is just a hallucination, caused the pressure of Duncan’s homicide and the pressure placed on him by his manipulative and cunning wife, Lady Macbeth. The audience at the time will have been shocked by this as Jacobean society saw king’s as almost holy since they respected the divine right of kings. Furthermore, here, Shakespeare is displaying the power that the supernatural has over events in the play since Macbeth has been driven to insanity by a supernatural prophecy.

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