46
Shakespeare I. A Brief Biography II. The Globe Theater III.Dramatic Terms

Shakespeare

  • Upload
    abdalla

  • View
    42

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Shakespeare. A Brief Biography The Globe Theater Dramatic Terms. Shakespeare: A Brief Biography. Born in April 1564 at Stratford-on-Avon John Shakespeare (father) tanner, glover, dealer in grain town official (alderman, and later mayor) Mary (mother) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Shakespeare

ShakespeareI. A Brief BiographyII. The Globe TheaterIII. Dramatic Terms

Page 2: Shakespeare

Shakespeare: A Brief Biography

Born in April 1564 at Stratford-on-AvonJohn Shakespeare (father)

tanner, glover, dealer in graintown official (alderman, and later mayor)

Mary (mother)daughter of Robert Arden, a prosperous gentleman-farmer.

Page 3: Shakespeare

Shakespeare: A Brief Biography

Attended the Stratford Grammar SchoolDid not go to Oxford or Cambridge

Page 4: Shakespeare

Shakespeare: A Brief Biography

Married Anne Hathaway in 1582Three children born: Susanna, Judith, and Hamnet

Page 5: Shakespeare

Shakespeare: A Brief Biography

By 1590, he was an actor and playwrightLeader of the Lord Chamberlain’s Men and the King’s MenDied April 23, 1616

Page 6: Shakespeare

Shakespeare: A Brief Biography

He was buried in Stratford; the inscription on his tombstone reads. . .

Page 7: Shakespeare

Shakespeare: A Brief Biography

“Good Friend, for Jesus’ sake, forbearTo dig the dust enclosed here;

Blest be the man that spares these stonesAnd curst be he that moves my bones.”

Page 8: Shakespeare

Shakespeare: A Brief Biography

Author of 37 plays and 154 sonnetsRobert Greene, a critic, attacked Shakespeare, a mere actor, for writing plays.He acted before Queen Elizabeth in 1594.The exact year in which William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet is unknown, but versions exist from 1603 and 1604

Page 9: Shakespeare

The Globe TheaterHe wrote his plays to be performed in the Globe Theater.The only account we have of the Globe is from a diary of a Swiss doctor who visited London and crossed the Thames River to see a play in a theater with a thatched roof.

Page 10: Shakespeare

The Globe TheaterIt was built in 1599 and burned down 14 years later in 1613.It was an 8 sided building with a central yard.

Page 11: Shakespeare

The Globe TheaterSpectators’ price of admissions was

one penny - to stand in yard around stage (these were called the groundlings)two pennies - to sit in 2nd and 3rd floor galleriesthree pennies - to sit in the first floor galleries

Page 12: Shakespeare

The Globe TheaterStage

1/3 of yard was filled with 6ft high platformno curtainno artificial lightingback wall had at least two doorsbalcony was used for hilltops, walls of cities, or second story scenes.trapdoors were used to raise or lower actors and props.

Page 13: Shakespeare

The Globe TheaterTake a tour of the new Globe Theater. . . .

www.shakespearesglobe.com/about-us/virtual-tour

There is a cross section of the Globe on page 428 of your book

Page 14: Shakespeare
Page 15: Shakespeare
Page 16: Shakespeare

Shakespearean DramaTragedy: A drama that ends in catastrophe—most

often death—for the main character and often for several other important characters as well

Tragic Hero: The main character, someone who is nobly born and has great influence in his or her society. This character has weakness or errors in judgment (Tragic Flaws) that lead to his or her downfall. Fate may play a role in the course that events take.

The tragic hero as a character has become a part of Western and even global consciousness, an archetype.

Page 17: Shakespeare

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Contrastone idea/character or object is thrown into opposition with another for the sake of emphasis or clarity use of contrast heightens distinctions of character and increases interest by placing opposites side by side (e.g. comic scene just before a tragic scene) character foils (those who provide contrast, usually to the protagonist) are used extensively by Shakespeare

Page 18: Shakespeare

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Fateintervention of some force over which humans have not controlmay complicate the plot but does not bring about the downfall of the hero (he ultimately chooses it for himself by his actions)pathos/sympathy may be felt by the audience for those hurt by fate

Page 19: Shakespeare

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

The SupernaturalShakespeare knew the appeal of ghosts, witches, premonitions, prophesies and other supernatural events for his audience and thus he included them

Page 20: Shakespeare

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Nemesis Nemesis is the Greek goddess of

vengeance, the personification of righteous indignation; she pursues those who have displeased the gods

by Shakespeare’s time, the term became associated with any agent of fate or bringer of just retribution

Page 21: Shakespeare

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Catharsisa term to describe the intended impact of

tragedy on the audience; the reason we are drawn, again and again, to watch tragedy despite its essential sadness

by experiencing the events which arouse pity and terror, we achieve a purging (catharsis) of these emotions

detached pity and involved terror that leaves the spectator with “calm of mind, all passion spent”

Page 22: Shakespeare

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Suspenseuncertainty in an incident, situation, or

behavior keeps the audience anxious concerning the

outcome of the protagonist’s conflictShakespeare uses conflict, precarious

situations, apparently unsolvable problems, foreshadowing and delay to develop suspense

Page 23: Shakespeare

Comic Relief

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 24: Shakespeare

Comic Relief

A humorous scene, incident, or speech that relieves the overall emotional intensity in the play. Comic relief helps the audience absorb the tragic events in the plot of a play.

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 25: Shakespeare

Allusion

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 26: Shakespeare

Allusion

A brief reference, within a work, to something outside the work that the reader or audience is expected to know. Many of Shakespeare’s allusions are to mythology or the Bible.

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 27: Shakespeare

Foil

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 28: Shakespeare

Foil

A character whose personality or attitudes are in sharp contrast to those of another character in the same work. This highlights the other character’s traits.

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 29: Shakespeare

Soliloquy and Aside

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 30: Shakespeare

Soliloquy and Aside A Soliloquy is a speech made by an actor alone on stage to let the audience know what is on that character’s mind.

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 31: Shakespeare

Soliloquy and Aside: A Soliloquy is a speech made by an actor alone on stage to let the audience know what is on that character’s mind.An Aside is a character’s remark to the audience or to another character that others on stage aren’t supposed to hear. The purpose of an aside is to reveal that character’s thoughts.

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 32: Shakespeare

Dramatic Irony

This situation occurs when the audience is aware of the conditions that are unknown to the character on stage or when some of the characters are ignorant of what really is on the speaker’s mind

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 33: Shakespeare

Blank Verse

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 34: Shakespeare

Blank Verse

Unrhymed lines of iambic pentameter. Shakespeare wrote all of his plays in blank verse.

Common Elements in Shakespearean Tragedy

Page 35: Shakespeare

Blank VerseExample of Blank Verse ~ / ~ / ~ / ~ / ~

/But soft.|What light| through yon|der win|dow

breaks?~ / ~ / ~ / ~~ / ~ /It is| the east|, and Jul|iet is |the sun!

Page 36: Shakespeare

HamletPrincipal conflict

When the play begins, the old king Hamlet has been killed by his brother, Claudius, who now sits on the throne. Claudius has also married the old king Hamlet’s wife, Gertrude. Young prince Hamlet (the son of the old king) is distraught over his father’s death and his mother’s hasty remarriage.

Page 37: Shakespeare

HamletThe ghost of his dead father visits Hamlet and

reveals to him that his father was poisoned by uncle Claudius. The Ghost commands prince Hamlet to avenge his death. Hamlet agrees, but spends much of the play uncertain of whether to trust the ghost’s words and eager to obtain proof of his uncle Claudius’s guilt.

Page 38: Shakespeare

CharactersHamlet: Son of a murdered Danish king and nephew

of the present king, Claudius. Hamlet suffers great mental anguish over the death of his father, the marriage of his mother to the suspected murderer (Claudius), and the clash between his moral sense and his desire for revenge against his father’s murderer. To ensnare the killer, Hamlet pretends madness. Some scholars contend that he actually suffers a mental breakdown.

Page 39: Shakespeare

CharactersHamlet: Son of a murdered Danish king and nephew

of the present king, Claudius. Hamlet suffers great mental anguish over the death of his father, the marriage of his mother to the suspected murderer (Claudius), and the clash between his moral sense and his desire for revenge against his father’s murderer. To ensnare the killer, Hamlet pretends madness. Some scholars contend that he actually suffers a mental breakdown.

Claudius: The new King of Denmark, Hamlet's uncle. He killed Hamlet’s father, the old king, and married Gertrude.

Page 40: Shakespeare

CharactersGertrude: Queen of Denmark, Hamlet's mother, and widow of the murdered king. Her marriage to Claudius within two months after the late king’s funeral deeply disturbs Hamlet.

Page 41: Shakespeare

CharactersGertrude: Queen of Denmark, Hamlet's mother, and widow of the murdered king. Her marriage to Claudius within two months after the late king’s funeral deeply disturbs Hamlet.Ghost of Hamlet’s father, old King Hamlet: The Ghost tells Hamlet about Claudius’s treacherous murder and commands Hamlet to avenge his death.

Page 42: Shakespeare

CharactersGertrude: Queen of Denmark, Hamlet's mother, and widow of the murdered king. Her marriage to Claudius within two months after the late king’s funeral deeply disturbs Hamlet.Ghost of Hamlet’s father, old King Hamlet: The Ghost tells Hamlet about Claudius’s treacherous murder and commands Hamlet to avenge his death.Polonius: Bootlicking Lord Chamberlain of King Claudius.

Page 43: Shakespeare

CharactersGertrude: Queen of Denmark, Hamlet's mother, and widow of the murdered king. Her marriage to Claudius within two months after the late king’s funeral deeply disturbs Hamlet.Ghost of Hamlet’s father, old King Hamlet: The Ghost tells Hamlet about Claudius’s treacherous murder and commands Hamlet to avenge his death.Polonius: Bootlicking Lord Chamberlain of King Claudius.Ophelia: Daughter of Polonius. She loves Hamlet, but his pretended madness–during which he rejects her–and the death of her father (who Hamlet kills by accident) trigger a pathological reaction in her.

Page 44: Shakespeare

CharactersGertrude: Queen of Denmark, Hamlet's mother, and widow of the murdered king. Her marriage to Claudius within two months after the late king’s funeral deeply disturbs Hamlet.Ghost of Hamlet’s father, old King Hamlet: The Ghost tells Hamlet about Claudius’s treacherous murder and commands Hamlet to avenge his death.Polonius: Bootlicking Lord Chamberlain of King Claudius.Ophelia: Daughter of Polonius. She loves Hamlet, but his pretended madness–during which he rejects her–and the death of her father (who Hamlet kills by accident) trigger a pathological reaction in her.Horatio: Hamlet’s best friend. Horatio never wavers in his loyalty to Hamlet.

Page 45: Shakespeare

CharactersLaertes: Son of Polonius, brother of Ophelia. Circumstances make him an enemy of Hamlet, and they duel to the death in a fencing match at the climax of the play. As a man who reacts to circumstances

quickly, with a minimum of reflection on the meaning and possible outcome of his actions, Laertes contrasts sharply with the pensive and indecisive Hamlet and, thus, serves as his foil.Rosencrantz, Guildenstern: Courtiers and friends of Hamlet who attended school with him. They turn against him to act as spies

for Claudius and agents in Claudius’s scheme to have Hamlet murdered in England. Hamlet quickly smells out their deception and treachery.Players: Actors who arrive at Elsinore to offer an entertainment. Hamlet asks them to stage a drama called The Mouse-trap, about a throne- seeker who murders a king. Hamlet hopes the play will cause Claudius to react in a way that reveals his guilt as the murderer of old King Hamlet.

Page 46: Shakespeare

Are there any questions?