Coriolanus
Coriolanus, written around 1608, is Shakespeare's most politically charged tragedy. The play follows Caius Marcius, a Roman general of extraordinary valor who earns the honorary name Coriolanus after his near-single-handed capture of the Volscian city of Corioli. When he reluctantly seeks the office of consul, his open contempt for the common people of Rome makes him easy prey for the scheming tribunes Sicinius and Brutus, who manipulate the populace into banishing him from the city he has defended with his blood.
Exiled and consumed by rage, Coriolanus joins forces with his former enemy, the Volscian general Aufidius, and marches on Rome. Only the desperate pleas of his mother Volumnia, the formidable woman who shaped his warrior identity, persuade him to spare the city. This act of mercy, however, proves fatal: Aufidius brands him a traitor and orchestrates his assassination. The play is a relentless examination of pride, class conflict, and the fraught relationship between a military hero and the democratic society he serves but cannot abide.
Shakespeare drew his material from Plutarch's Lives, but the play's exploration of populism, elitism, and the fragility of republican governance has given it enduring relevance. Coriolanus has been embraced by political thinkers of every stripe, and its central figure remains one of Shakespeare's most uncompromising and divisive characters.