Teaching with Shakespeare: Critics in the Classroom"Today the number and nature of interpretive strategies developed by contemporary theorists for reading Shakespeare's texts may not only delight but also disconcert the scholars, critics, teachers, and students who study them. In this work, six leading Shakespearean scholar-critics, in a series of clear and elegant lectures delivered to undergraduate English majors, explain distinctive procedures that they and other influential, contemporary critics use for interpreting Shakespeare's poems and plays. Workshops, which illustrate with Shakespearean texts the practice of specific methods, follow the lectures." "Helen Vendler (Harvard) guides readers to Shakespeare's poetry by explaining and illustrating how to hear the unexpected and unobtrusive but crucial questions that sonnets pose, and by tracing the increasingly powerful perceptions that precise, informed aesthetic responses to these questions evoke. R. A. Foakes (UCLA) identifies basic cultural issues underlying traditional approaches to teaching Shakespeare's plays, especially the tragedies, and explains how poststructuralist responses to these issues lead to a reevaluation of the "Bard." Leah Marcus (U. Texas, Austin) also explains cultural issues, particularly about the "construct" that has become "Shakespeare," and introduces editorial questions about the actual textual versions offered to students, notably of Hamlet and King Lear. With emphasis on the plays in performance, John Wilders (Oxford, Middlebury) delivers a structure-oriented, acting-centered analysis of Julius Caesar and then directs, in similar fashion, a production of the first scene of A Midsummer Night's Dream. Patricia Parker (Stanford), on the other hand, follows intricate lines of wordplay through a series of deconstructions and reconstructions in The Merry Wives of Windsor and A Midsummer Night's Dream. Bringing the series to a close, Annabel Patterson (Duke) presents an explicitly issue-oriented analysis of editorial, critical, scholarly, dramatic, and cinematic interpretations of Henry V; and she offers a concluding commentary on the workshops of her colleagues."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
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Page 70
The problematic of proto - professional ideological production denied
autonomous political weight in a society struggling to preserve the hegemony of
an aristocratic class - ideology is here displayed in order to be ridiculed .
Shakespeare ' s ...
The problematic of proto - professional ideological production denied
autonomous political weight in a society struggling to preserve the hegemony of
an aristocratic class - ideology is here displayed in order to be ridiculed .
Shakespeare ' s ...
Page 241
Branagh further observed that the “ play itself ” is consequently performed very
rarely ; that this suspicion about it is “ unfair " to its true complexity ; and that in his
first attempt to act the part of Henry for a 1984 production by the Royal ...
Branagh further observed that the “ play itself ” is consequently performed very
rarely ; that this suspicion about it is “ unfair " to its true complexity ; and that in his
first attempt to act the part of Henry for a 1984 production by the Royal ...
Page 243
Just how uncompromising and questioning a view of nationalism and militarism
does the Branagh production offer , especially when the economic register of film
production and of “ popularity ” were so clearly in the forefront of the conception ...
Just how uncompromising and questioning a view of nationalism and militarism
does the Branagh production offer , especially when the economic register of film
production and of “ popularity ” were so clearly in the forefront of the conception ...
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Contents
List of Figures | 9 |
Poems Posing Questions | 23 |
The Sonnets | 37 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Teaching with Shakespeare: Critics in the Classroom Union College (Schenectady N y ) Limited preview - 1994 |
Teaching with Shakespeare: Critics in the Classroom Bruce McIver,Ruth Stevenson No preview available - 1994 |
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action appear audience authority bear become beginning called carry character comes conveying Cordelia cozening critical cultural death Dream early edition effect Elizabethan English Enter example extreme Falstaff father feel figure final Folio follow French Germans give Hamlet hand Henry interesting interpretation it's Kent kill kind King Lear language Latin less literary London look Lord lovers Marcus mean Merry Wives morall never night Oxford performance play plot poem political possible present Press problem production Quarto question reason recent reference relation scene seems sense Shakespeare soliloquy sonnet speak stage stands structure suggests teaching tell thing thou thought tion translation true turn University Vendler wall whole women