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Spring 2001 | |
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English 290 |
Rice 106, (440) 775-8583 |
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E-mail: Robert.Pierce@oberlin.edu |
Assignments:
Feb. 5 Introduction: acting the language
Feb. 7 Begin reading The First Part of King Henry the Fourth: acting the self
Feb. 9 Finish reading The First Part of King Henry the Fourth; creating a world
Feb. 12 Company and theater: General Introduction, pp. xliii-lii
Feb. 14 Life in Shakespeare's England: General Introduction, pp. xii-xxx
Feb. 19 The Second Part of King Henry the Fourth
Feb. 26 The Merry Wives of Windsor
Mar. 5 King Lear
Mar. 16 FIRST PAPER DUE
Mar. 19 Macbeth
Apr. 2 Antony and Cleopatra
Apr. 16 Twelfth Night
Apr. 23 Measure for Measure
Apr. 30 A Midsummer Night's Dream
May 7 The Tempest
May 11 SECOND PAPER DUE
1) Participation in class--At a minimum you should attend practically all of the classes. Do not cut because you haven't completed a paper or a reading of the play. I do not require a formal excuse for an absence, but let me know if you expect to be absent for several periods. In addition to regular attendance, try to take some part in discussion even if it is difficult for you. A good first step is to ask questions that bother you, either in class or when you can catch me; that is one of the most valuable kinds of contribution you can make. I will specifically grade class discussion.
2) Nine one-page comments--discuss some aspect of the play that interests or puzzles you. Write one such comment for each play except the one in which you do a performance project. I will accept comments after the first day that the play is discussed for partial credit (whole credit if submitted with a legitimate excuse). Grading will be Credit/No Entry.
3) Group performance project--Sign up for one of the projects to act a scene. Your group should begin work on your scene well before the performance in class is due. One week before the performance you should get me a copy of a script you have prepared for your scene with your cuts, tentative decisions about blocking and business, assignment of parts, and a brief discussion (2-3 paragraphs) of how your scene as you are doing it contributes to a distinctive world in the play. See the later section of this syllabus, "Advice for Preparing Your Scene."
4) Two papers--The papers should be about five to seven pages each. See "Assignments for the Two Papers" below for details. I am liberal on authorizing extensions, especially brief ones, but do check with me if you do not expect to be able to turn in your paper by the end of the day it is due. A paper without an approved extension will be penalized in the grade.
Write about a page in response to a critical question about each of the plays, except for the play on which you do your production project. You may use the topic below or another of your own choosing. Don't worry about getting your ideas into finished form; this is the opportunity for testing out intuitions you aren't quite sure of, leaving questions only partly answered, etc. I will grade these comments Credit/No Entry, though I will keep track to make sure you are keeping up with them. I will write brief responses to them, and I will draw on them for lecture and discussion. Your comments may be either typed or handwritten. Neat corrections are fine, but please try to give me a more or less readable text. Use 8 1/2 x 11 paper, and be sure to have your name on it. Ideally you should write the comment before reading any criticism or hearing class discussion.
The First Part of King Henry the Fourth (Feb. 7)
Using the map on p. A-73 of our anthology or a similar map of Great Britain, work out the locations and movements of the characters, building toward the battle at Shrewsbury. What inferences can you make about life and politics in medieval Britain?
The Second part of King Henry the Fourth (Feb. 19)
What qualities from Rumor's Induction are picked up to characterize the world of the play? Thus Northumberland is reported to be pretending to be ill; where else do illness and feigning occur in the play? And what image of England do these elements create?
The Merry Wives of Windsor (Feb. 26)
What values seem to be shared in Windsor society, and what values are in dispute? (For the purposes of this topic consider Fenton and Falstaff and his gang as outsiders. Parson Evans and Dr. Caius are more doubtful cases.)
King Lear (Mar. 5)
King Lear begins with a terrible mistake, Lear's condemnation of Cordelia's answer after he accepts the professions of love by Goneril and Regan. In some ways the scene is like an old folk tale: "Once upon a time there was an old king who had three daughters . . . ." What elements of the opening scene are in keeping with such a folk-tale atmosphere? Are there elements of a more sophisticated Renaissance court intrigue?
Macbeth (Mar. 19)
The characters in Macbeth are much concerned with what is involved in being manly or womanly. Thus in her soliloquy at Act I, Scene v, lines 38 ff., Lady Macbeth utters a sort of monstrous, inverted prayer:
Come, you spirits
That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here.Is her prayer answered? What does this motif in the play imply about gender roles as social constructions or as built on human nature?
Antony and Cleopatra (Apr. 2)
This play is built on the contrast between Rome and Alexandria. Choose some one element of that contrast, trace it through the play, and then write a comment on its significance. For example, one might consider food and drink in this play full of feasting. The Romans are supposed to be superior to the pleasures of food and drink, while Cleopatra's court provides them in lavish display. However, the most elaborate feast in the play is among Romans on Pompey's galley. What the Romans scorn, they also hunger for.
Twelfth Night (Apr. 16)
There is a fair behavior in thee, Captain;
And though that nature with a beauteous wall
Doth oft close in pollution, yet of thee
I will believe thou hast a mind that suits
With this thy fair and outward character. (1.2.47-51)
Measure for Measure (Apr. 23)
One way in which Measure for Measure is a problem play is that it confronts characters with moral dilemmas. Most strikingly, Isabella is confronted with a choice whether or not to give her virginity to Angelo in order to save her brother's life. I regularly poll my Shakespeare classes at the beginning of our study of the play whether or not in their opinion she should do so, with results that I will report in class. In a one-page comment say what you think, and give a brief justification for your view. (I know that this is a naive question that you shouldn't have to answer and that people shouldn't confuse drama with real life, but I won't show your answer to my colleagues if you won't tell on me for asking.)
A Midsummer Night's Dream (Apr. 30)
Shakespeare establishes the fairy world of the play in the first 143 lines of Act Two, Scene One. Describe some of the most striking qualities of that world, and show how some one of them is evoked within this scene. Thus in contrast with Athens it is a world of darkness, but a darkness suffused with light and color, so that we can see the spots in the "gold coats" of the cowslips.
The Tempest (May 7)
I want everybody to sign up for one of the motifs in a list that I will pass around the week before. Your job will be to locate that motif both in The Tempest and in the other plays we have studied. Then write a comment comparing its use in The Tempest with the other occurrences.
First paper, due March 16: Choose some one scene from the plays we have read so far. (It need not be an officially designated scene in our text but should be a unit with dramatic punctuation at beginning and end, like an entrance or exit or a shift to a different grouping of characters.) Take careful notes on the scene, including what we as an audience should see, hear, and think in the scene. Look for links to other parts of the play. Then write a paper of five to seven pages on the topic: how does this scene contribute to establishing or developing the distinctive world of the play? Note that you need not consult outside criticism for this paper and should certainly avoid making your text a gathering of other critics' opinions. Of course if you do use criticism, you should document that by annotation or a bibliography as appropriate.
Second paper, due May 11: Find some one image or image cluster that is important in one of the plays. Gather all of the occurrences of it in the play. Notice the various contexts, the qualities of the image that are emphasized, the ways that it links up with other elements of the play. Then write a paper that discusses how your image works to help create the world of the play. In this case I do want you to read at least one piece of criticism on the play and include it in a bibliography, but I strongly suggest that you do the gathering and thinking about the image before reading or looking back at the criticism. You may refer to the criticism in your paper or not as seems appropriate given the ideas you are developing.
It is perfectly appropriate to discuss your papers with others. I will be glad to consult with you about topics and about any problems you may have in the process of planning and writing your papers. I will be glad to look at a draft. Each paper should be roughly 5-7 pages of normal double-spaced typing. Neat, legible corrections are perfectly acceptable. You need not footnote references to the plays from our text; simply include act, scene, and inclusive line numbers in a form like the following: (2.2.23-27).
If we can set up a time, I would be glad to watch your group rehearse and to offer suggestions. Also you can ask me any questions about problems in the scene, though I don't guarantee to have the answers. If you feel nervous, that actually helps up to a point. And keep in mind that you and your fellows in the scene probably know more about it than anyone else in the class, including me, if you have put in some time on careful thought and hard rehearsing.
These scenes are rather short, but it is essential to catch every mood and shift of feeling in your character. What is your object, the thing or things you as the character are striving for in this scene? What are the inner and outer obstacles to it? What are the things you aren't saying? How are you reacting when you don't speak? What is said by your posture, your movements, any objects or bits of costume you may have?
Be sure to get together and rehearse your scene several times through. Prepare for the rehearsal process by learning your lines thoroughly and thinking through your character. It would be good if you can read the whole play from the point of view of your character. Know the meanings of the words, allusions, etc., in your part.
As you rehearse, concentrate on the language. Memorize your lines as accurately as possible, and keep your pronunciation clear. Don't drop ending d's, t's, and other consonants. Listen for rhythms and repeated sounds and words. Use the rhetoric rather than fighting it or making it low-key. In general play things big, with exaggeration rather than understatement.
Try to get inside your character, reacting as he or she would react. People don't usually think things like "I am a villain" or "I am a silly person," and they don't usually intend to be funny. Keep in mind that as a character you don't know what is going to happen next in the scene. In a long speech discover the words as you go along, thinking and feeling as you go. When you say something, say it clearly to someone. In a soliloquy or aside, try saying it to one person in the audience. (You can shift from one person to another.)
Think of rehearsal and even the actual performance as a time of experiment and exploration. Don't reject things until you actually try them even if you are pretty sure they won't work. Try different approaches: movements, inflections of the lines, reactions to what is said. Don't foreclose possibilities on the basis of some view of what the play is about. Don't ask, "Is this right?" but "What happens if I do it this way?" Of course you finally have to choose, but make your final choices as late as possible.
For the written report you may divide up the task or, if someone has a short part, draft that person to do most of the writing. I do want one report for the whole group.
Feb. 21 2 Henry IV, 2.4.205-350
Falstaff_________________Doll_________________
Poins_________________ Hal____________________
Hostess (also Bardolph, Page)_________________
Feb. 28 The Merry Wives of Windsor, 2.2.153-300
Ford_____________________ Falstaff_____________________
Mar. 7 King Lear I.iv.128-254 "Can you make . . . their betters." (Have Kent's line read in.)
Goneril______________ Lear__________________
Fool___________________
Mar. 21 Macbeth 1.1 and 1.3.1-37 (to Macbeth and Banquo's entrance)
First Witch_____________ Second_______________
Third_________________
Apr. 13 Antony and Cleopatra 5.2.70-109 "Most noble . . . I know 't."
Dollabella_____________________ Cleopatra____________________
Apr. 18 Twelfth Night 1.5.163-293
Viola____________________ Olivia_______________________
(Have Maria's line read in.)
Apr. 25 Measure for Measure 2.4.30-141 "How now" to "language."
Isabella________________________ Angelo_______________________
May 2 A Midsummer Night's Dream 3.2.177-344
Hermia__________________ Helena_____________________
Demetrius________________ Lysander_____________________
May 6 The Tempest 1.2.378-505 "Come unto these yellow sands" to end
Ariel______________ Ferdinand_______________ Miranda______________
Prospero________________
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822.33 |
Bullough, Geoffrey, ed. |
Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare, vols. 1-8 |
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822.33 |
Calderwood, James & |
Essays in Shakespearean Criticism |
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822.33 |
Dean, Leonard F., ed. |
Shakespeare: Modern Essays in Criticism |
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822.33 |
Frye, Northrop |
A Natural Perspective |
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PR 2991 |
Lenz, Carolyn et al., eds. |
The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare |
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PR 2894 |
Schoenbaum, Samuel |
Shakespeare's Lives |
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PR 2893 |
Schoenbaum, Samuel |
William Shakespeare: A Documentary Life |
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PR 2976 |
Schwartz, Murray M. & Coppelia Kahn, eds. |
Representing Shakespeare: New Psychoanalytic Essays |
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PR 2750 |
Shakespeare, William |
Shakespeare's Plays in Quarto |
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822.33 |
Styan, J. L. |
Shakespeare's Stagecraft |
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822.33 |
Van Doren, Mark |
Shakespeare |
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PR 2991 |
Young, David |
Shakespeare's Middle Tragedies |
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822.33 |
Young, David |
The Heart's Forest |
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PR3065 |
Adelman, Janet |
Suffocating Mothers |
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822.33 |
Barber, C.L. |
Shakespeare's Festive Comedy |
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22.33 |
Bradley, A. C. |
Shakespearean Tragedy |
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PR2976 |
Cavell, Stanley |
Disowning Knowledge in Six Plays of Shakespeare |
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822.33 |
Elton, W. R. |
King Lear and the Gods |
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PR3014 |
Gillies, John |
Shakespeare and the Geography of Difference |
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822.33 |
Granville Barker, H |
Prefaces to Shakespeare, 2 vols.
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PR2976 |
Greenblatt, Stephen |
Shakespearean Negotiations
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822.33 |
Knight, G. Wilson |
The Wheel of Fire |
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PR2991 |
Neely, Carol |
Broken Nuptials in Shakespeare's Plays |
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822.33 |
Young, David |
Something of Great Constancy |