TELEVISION

How to Read and Understand Shakespeare

Series: Great Courses
4.5
(82)
Episodes
24
Rating
TVPG
Year
2013
Language
English

About

Shakespeare's plays are masterworks, but they can be hard to understand for a modern English speaker. Gain direct insight into Shakespeare's writing in this course which explains how to enter Shakespeare's world, how to grasp what's happening in his plays, and how to enjoy each play on both the page and the stage.

Related Subjects

Episodes

1 to 3 of 24

1. Approaching Shakespeare - The Scene Begins

30m

Consider four points of entry for understanding what's happening in a Shakespeare play. Learn how to approach a single dramatic scene, focusing on Shakespeare's richly metaphorical use of language. Begin to grasp the playwright's use of stagecraft, and how his plays require the audience's active participation and powers of imagination.

2. Shakespeare's Theater and Stagecraft

30m

Here, envision theatrical London as it existed in Shakespeare's time. First, consider Shakespeare's fundamental intent to 'hold the mirror up to nature': to imitate the living world. Then learn about the colorful milieu of Elizabethan theater; its conventions of physical space, scenery, and costumes; and how the playwright created theatrical 'reality' through language.

3. A Midsummer Night's Dream - Comic Tools

30m

In his comedic plays, Shakespeare drew on the classical Roman model of comedy. In A Midsummer Night's Dream, see how he expands the form, using the archetypal plot devices of 'blocked love,' its resolution at either the altar or the grave, and the escape from urban life to the magical world of the forest.

4. A Midsummer Night's Dream - Comic Structure

30m

This episode explores key principles for understanding and appreciating Shakespeare's comedies. Grasp the thematic elements of a shift from friendship to romantic love and of severe testing of the characters. See how the three-part structure of the comedies leads inevitably to reconciliation and regeneration.

5. Romeo and Juliet - Words, Words, Words

30m

Shakespeare's primary tool as a playwright is words themselves as dramatic expressions of character and meaning. In Romeo and Juliet, see how Shakespeare ingeniously uses language to distinguish class and personality, and how he uses the poetic form of the sonnet in creating a sublime language of love.

6. Romeo and Juliet - The Tools of Tragedy

30m

Continuing with Romeo and Juliet, observe how the famous balcony scene shifts the action and sense of the play toward a new kind of character-driven tragedy. In the play's unfolding, note the role of the tension between fate and free will, and the arc of development whereby Juliet becomes a great tragic figure.

Extended Details

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