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Shakespeare!
Friends, Romans, Countrymen… lend me your eyes and ears! The time has come upon us to join in revelry with the Bard, the Myth, the Legend, William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare was and is many different things to many different people. Some consider him the greatest writer in the English language (or any language). Others think of him as an icon, a symbol of “English class.”
Love him or hate him, the man’s works have survived 400 years, and are apt to survive at least another century in the popular imagination. In class this year, we’re going to explore the different meanings of Shakespeare: the man, the myth, the poet, the playwright, the businessman, the philosopher… and so on.
The Reading of Shakespeare Based on your vote, this year we’ll read the following:
Hamlet
Much Ado About Nothing
Othello
Twelfth Night
King Lear
Much Ado About Nothing
Antony and Cleopatra
Assorted Sonnets
Shakespeare’s plays didn’t survive because they were “great”; they survived because people had fun reading and performing them. So above all else, we’re going to have fun with our challenges: the analysis and performance of his plays and poems.
Grades and Evaluations With that in mind, I have designed my first semester around ONE Central Assignment: A Research Paper, combined with a Project/Presentation, that together makes up 55% of your grade.
Of course, the most ambitious of journeys can only be done in small steps. Continuously, throughout the semester, we’ll be taking these steps together to ensure that you succeed in your final project and paper. These steps will be done in your Journal, which I expect you to bring to class every day.
Every Friday, I review your work to see if you are on track.
Research Paper - 40% Students will create a research paper that is the synthesis of the following: 1) Writings in their Daily Journals - 10 min per class 2) One Nonfiction book about Shakespeare, his plays (or one of his plays), Elizabethan England, or Shakespearean performance on stage or film 3) Two Original Essays - Analysis of Literature 4) Two textual sources, fiction or nonfiction 5) Quotations from 2 of the Plays listed above, or any Sonnets
Presentation - 15% Students will do one of the following: 1) Present their research in a 10 minute powerpoint presentation (Rubric provided) 2) Create a 10 minute lesson for students (to be done in teams) on a Shakespearean play other than Hamlet
3) Act out (alone or with others) a scene from a Shakespearean play other than Hamlet - one page reflection
So that’s the big chunk, the big 55%. The rest is outlined below:
Original Writing - 15% Students will do one of the following: 1) Write and present an Allusive Sonnet of their own creation (or poetic monologue), inspired by a text of Shakespeare 2) Modernize a scene in Hamlet (or another scene from a Shakespeare play)
Quizzes - 10% Mostly unstructured, made up on the spot. This allows me the flexibility to adapt what they do. I want them to be ready for College-reading, lecture, note-taking, and discussion. That's the bulk of it.
Teamwork - 20% This has two categories: 1) How well you work with me
2) How well you work with your classmates
Syllabus – Semester I Curious Incident Week 0 - Shakespeare the man, the myth, the legend. Weeks 1: Curious Incident - Reading Quiz. Review of literary terms we'll need to know this year.
Selected Nonfiction & Sonnets Week 2: Focus on Christopher's state of consciousness. The geography of England, now and in Shakespeare's time. Week 3: Shakespeare's world - Nonfiction books assigned. Begin training in Shakespeare's language.
Hamlet Week 4: Start College Essay. Shakespeare's world. Week 5: Plots of Popular Shakespeare plays Week 6: Start of Research Paper
Week 7: Begin Hamlet - plot and basics. Start of College Essay Writing - Hamlet returns from college, we apply to it! Week 8: The Elizabethan World View: the Body Politic and the Great Chain of Being Week 9: The ambiguity of boundaries in Hamlet. Ways to understand family - why Hamlet is so popular. Week 10: Consciousness - Hamlet confronts consciousness Week 11-12: Continue our study of consciousness. Sonnets that explore states of mind and quality of feeling.
Much Ado About Nothing Week 13: Gender roles. Shakespearean comedy in performance. Week 14: Malapropism and slapstick. Finish Research Paper before Winter Break
Week 15-18: Presentations and Original Writing. Acting. Films. General revelry. Introducing the plays of 2nd semester.