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EN301 Shakespeare and Selected Dramatists of His Time


Convenor:  Dr Paul Prescott

 


LECTURES: SPRING TERM 2010

 

Mondays 2-3pm and Wednesdays 12-1pm in the ACCR

(Attendance at lectures is compulsory and is vital to participation in and enjoyment of the module.)

3. SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY


1        M 11 Jan   Hamlet         PM

          W 13 Jan   Hamlet         JF

2        M 18 Jan   Othello         TH

          W 20 Jan   Othello         CR

3        M 25 Jan   Lear            PM

          W 27 Jan   Lear            JF

4        M 1 Feb      Antony and Cleopatra   PM

          W 3 Feb      Antony and Cleopatra   CR

5        M 8 Feb      Coriolanus         PM

          W 10 Feb   Coriolanus         PP


READING WEEK


4. MIDDLETON AND SHAKESPEARE: SEX AND COMMODITY


7       M 22 Feb   Sex and the City: Shakespeare and Middleton,

                              London, Vienna, Troy  CR

         W 24 Feb   Measure for Measure   PP

8       M 1 Mar      Troilus and Cressida      TH

         W 3 Mar      Troilus and Cressida      PP

         [Th 4 Mar            Chaste Maid Performance at King Edward's School, Stratford]

9       M 8 Mar      A Chaste Maid      CR

         W 10 Mar   The Changeling      CR

10     M 15 Mar   The Problem of Masculinity;

                               or—Whoring Women   CR

         W 17 Mar    The Winter’s Tale      PM




LECTURES: AUTUMN TERM 2009



1. THE ELEMENTS OF EARLY MODERN DRAMA

(with reference to: HAMLET; HENRY IV, 1; TWELFTH NIGHT; A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM)


1        W 7 Oct 1pm  Module Intro                       Paul Prescott  / Jonathan Bate

2       M 12 Oct    Historical Contexts                 Jonathan Bate

         W 14 Oct   Shakespeare's Multiple texts   Carol Rutter

3       M 19 Oct   The Scene                                  Peter Mack

         W 21 Oct   Speech Acts                              Carol Rutter

4       M 26 Oct   Twelfth Night in Performance   Tony Howard

         W 28 Oct   Objects                                     Carol Rutter

 [W 28 Oct evening:  Twelfth Night at RSC   ]

5      M 2 Nov      Endings (genre)                       Paul Prescott

        W 4 Nov      Section A / Recap                    Paul Prescott


READING WEEK


2. MARLOWE AND SHAKESPEARE

7       M 16 Nov   Christopher Marlowe              Carol Rutter

         W 18 Nov   The Jew of Malta                     Jonathan Bate

8       M 23 Nov   The Merchant of Venice           Paul Prescott

         W 25 Nov   The Merchant of Venice          Carol Rutter

9       M 30 Nov   Edward II                                Jonathan Bate

         W 2 Dec      Richard II                              Peter Mack

10     M 7 Dec      Dr Faustus                             Peter Mack

         W 9 Dec      Macbeth                                 Carol Rutter




OVERVIEW

In this module we look at a selection of plays by Shakespeare and two of his most eminent contemporaries in the context of the theatres and cultures of their time and ours. In the first half of the Autumn Term we aim to write a ‘grammar’ of the Elizabethan theatre and to explore elements of text and performance in a concentrated body of four plays, all of which feature plays-within-plays and thus reflect self-consciously on the purpose of playing: Twelfth Night, Hamlet, A Midsummer Night's Dream and Henry IV, Part 1. In the second half of the term, we explore the plays of Christopher Marlowe, studying them both in their own right and as profound influences on Shakespeare's early dramaturgy. 

CONTACT:

Lectures: Mondays 2-3pm and Wednesdays 12-1pm in the ACCR

(Attendance at lectures is compulsory and is vital to participation in and enjoyment of the module.)

Weekly Seminars: Various times throughout the week.

 One of the great benefits of doing Shakespeare at Warwick is that a wide array of theatre trips, play-readings, ad hoc workshops and events take place throughout the year. Please regularly check your email and the CAPITAL Centre website (http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/cross_fac/capital/) for news of these.

SET TEXTS:

These are the only editions you will be allowed in the open book exam so it pays to get them now. We have decided to give students the choice as to which edition of the Complete Works they buy. Both the Norton and the RSC will be used in lectures and seminars.

William Shakespeare, The RSC Complete Works of Shakespeare, ed. Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen (London: Palgrave, 2007). Hardback or Paperback (2008) OR William Shakespeare, The Norton Shakespeare, ed. Stephen Greenblatt et al. (New York and London: Norton and Co, 1997) OR William Shakespeare, The Oxford Shakespeare, ed. Wells and Taylor (Oxford, 2005).
Christopher Marlowe, Dr Faustus and Other Plays, ed. David Bevington and Eric Rasmussen (Oxford: OUP, 1995). 
Thomas Middleton, Women Beware Women and Other Plays, ed. Richard Dutton (Oxford: OUP, 1999).

Assessment:

i) 1 x 5000-word Essay OR Creative Project (50%) to be submitted by 3pm on Monday, Week 10 (Spring Term) [For examples of both essays and creative projects see/click here> Student Work 2008-09]

The CREATIVE PROJECT consists of a piece of creative work (adaptation, music, photography, creative writing, screenplay and so on) + a Reflective Essay (2000 words). There is no strict word limit to the Creative Project itself, but we encourage you to be realistic and keep the task on a manageable scale (e.g. write a short story rather than a novel; a film scenario and sample scene rather than an entire screenplay; a sonata rather than a symphony...). You will have to have your project approved by your tutor according to his or her deadline (typically around Reading Week); you are also welcome to consult the module convenor about your project. The Reflective Essay is a very important component of your submission: in it, you will: describe the rationale of your project (i.e. why was it worth doing?); provide firm evidence of research and reading (e.g. if you are adapting Hamlet, you should show some awareness of the history and theory of adaptation); reflect on the successes and shortcomings of the finished product. The Reflective Essay should include a bibliography and be presented to normal scholarly standards.

ii) 1 x 3h 15min exam in May (50%). Students must answer one question from both Section A and Section B.

 Assessment remains the same for both traditional and practical ('Shax without chairs') modes of taking the module. It is important to state that the assessment is not in any way weighted in favour of either Mode of learning. EN301 essay titles and exam questions have always sought to elicit the widest variety of creative and critical responses. In the Assessed Essay, for example, students can choose from a very long list of titles or are free to devise their own title in consultation with their tutor. In theory and in practice, any learning experience – whether seminar- or workshop-based or even extra-curricular – might form the basis for Assessed Work. This remains the case.


Formative Assessment:

By the end of Spring Term, every student on the module will have submitted / presented and received tutor feedback on:

i) 1 x practice Section A response

ii) 1 x 1500 word passage or detailed plan of their Assessed Essay. (Important note: your tutor is not permitted to comment on a complete draft of the essay, so please do not ask him or her to do so.)

iii) At least 1 review (book, film, theatre, etc) and/or class presentation and/or a student-led seminar 

 

Module aims:

By the end of the module, students should (be able to): 

Have consolidated their skills in reading narrative, poetry and drama

Comment illuminatingly on a passage of dramatic poetry

Analyse the dramatic structure, appearance and effect of a scene

Comment on the ideas in a play and the way they are presented

Know enough about Elizabethan and Jacobean conditions of performance to think about how the dramatists use the resources of the stage and how the ensemble nature of theatrical companies influenced play composition and production

Have sufficient experience of live and film performances of the plays to be able to talk about the impact of particular scenes today

Have some familiarity with problems of textual transmission and editing in the plays

Know a group of plays well enough to understand how the separate scenes and speeches of the play contribute to the whole

Know a range of plays such that they can begin to ask questions about Shakespeare’s development

Know some plays by Shakespeare, Marlowe and Jonson/Webster/Middleton so that they can address the issue of connections and dependencies between them

Have some critical awareness of the traditions of Shakespeare criticism

Use their knowledge of Shakespeare to think about problems which concern them      

Understand how some of the major issues and themes dramatised in Shakespeare’s plays – love, war, sexuality, religion, law, civilization, race, etc – function in an early modern context while continuing to challenge readers and spectators today.



LECTURE SLIDES 09-10

Antony and Cleopatra - Carol Rutter

Shakespeare's Multiple Texts

Shakespeare's Endings

Seeing/Hearing Theatrically

The Merchant of Venice

LECTURE SLIDES - PAST YEARS

The Winter's Tale - Lecture Illustrations

Hamlet Props and Objects Images

Rhetorical Figures 07

Romeo: Scenic Form

Scenic Form, Dramatic Form

The Tempest and Post-colonialism

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