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Elizabethan Age and Shakespeare Notes. Era is named after Elizabeth I, monarch of England (1558-1603) During her reign, a Renaissance (French for re-birth) of the arts and sciences was occurring.
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Era is named after Elizabeth I, monarch of England (1558-1603) • During her reign, a Renaissance (French for re-birth) of the arts and sciences was occurring. • The Renaissance (1350-1600) marked a transition from the medieval to the modern world in Western Europe. • English drama produced during this time is known as Elizabethan Drama
In general, there was not much scenery in Elizabethan drama; costumes were quite elaborate and there were many props • For example, a pig bladder full of blood was used for Juliet’s death scene in Romeo and Juliet. • All roles were played by men. Sometimes actors had to learn as many as six parts at a time. • Young boys played the female parts. That is why there are few romance scenes on stage.
Shakespeare’s Early Life • Born April 23, 1564 • Birthplace: Henley Street, Stratford-on-Avon, not far from London • Parents: John Shakespeare; Mary Arden, from a wealthy family • inherited land to William because he was the oldest of eight children
Married Anne Hathaway on November 27, 1582 (he was 18, she was 26) • Oldest daughter, Susanna, was born six months later • 1585- twins born - Hamnet and Judith • Hamnet died at age 11 (profoundly affected Shakespeare; Hamlet is a variation of that name)
Shakespeare’s Career • He wrote 154 sonnets and two long poems • He wrote 37 plays. • Most of his sonnets were written between 1592-1594 because the theaters were closed due to the Black Plague • By the time he was 32, he was considered the best writer of comedy and tragedy • He died on his 52nd birthday (April 23,1616)
Public Theaters • The Globe was the most important of the public theaters • “Groundlings,” - paid a penny for admission, stood in the open court • Usually from the lower class • liked to throw food • yelled at the actors on stage • and sometimes even sat on the stage, especially if they didn’t like what they were seeing. • The higher priced tickets were two and three cents.
History of The Globe • built in 1599 • seated 2,100 people • Shakespeare was one of ten owners • 1613—burnt down (waterproof thatch roof caught on fire during a performance of Henry VIII--- cannon)
Background to Romeo and Juliet • written about 1595 • probably his 13th play • idea taken from “The Tragical History of Romeo and Juliet,” a poem by Arthur Brooke (1562) • Unlike his other tragedies, Shakespeare allows chance, or fate, to determine the destiny of the hero and heroine (Romeo and Juliet) more than their tragic flaws do.
Freytag’s Pyramid Act 3 : Climax Ac t 4: Falling Action Act 2: Rising Action Act 5: Resolution Act I: Exposition
Blank Verse • The chief poetic form Shakespeare used was blank verse, or unrhymed iambic pentameter. • Examples: Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Soliloquies: a speech made by an actor who is alone on stage, intended to reveal his thoughts • Asides: remarks made by a character that are meant to be heard by the audience and perhaps one other character on stage, but no one else. • Asides are usually ironic because they inform the audience about something of which the other characters are ignorant.
Conventions: agreements between the artist and the audience. • For example, it was assumed that all characters spoke in poetic form unless they were commoners; the dialogue was meant to be blunt or the dialogue was relating serious information (as in a royal document or letter). • Anachronisms: out of place objects, customs or beliefs. • For example, the Romans in the play Julius Caesar didn’t wear Roman attire. Rather they wore elaborate Elizabethan costumes.
Tragic flaw: a flaw, or error, in the tragic hero that is the cause of his downfall. • Foil: two contrasting characters, used to highlight the differences between the two.
Simile • A comparison of two different things or ideas through the use of the words “like” or “as.” • It is a stated comparison, where the author says one thing is like another • e.g., The warrior fought like a lion.
Metaphor • A direct comparison of two seemingly unlike objects • The author states the one thing is another. • It is usually a comparison between something that is real or concrete and something that is abstract. • e.g., Life is but a dream.
Personification • A kind of metaphor which gives inanimate objects or abstract ideas human characteristics. • e.g., The wind cried in the dark.
Hyperbole • A deliberate, extravagant, and often outrageous exaggeration. • It may be used either for serious or comic effect. • e.g., The shot that was heard ‘round the world.’
Understatement (Meiosis) • The opposite of hyperbole. • It is a kind of irony which deliberately represents something as much less than it really is. • e.g., I could probably manage to survive on a salary of two million dollars per year.
Paradox • A statement which contradicts itself. It may seem almost absurd. • Although it may seem to be at odds with ordinary experience, it usually turns out to have a coherent meaning, and it reveals a truth that is normally hidden. • e.g., The more you know, the more you know you don’t know.
Oxymoron • A form of paradox which combines a pair of contrary terms into a single expression. • This combination usually serves the purpose of shocking the reader into awareness. • e.g., sweet sorrow
Pun • A play on words which are identical or similar in sound but which have sharply diverse meanings. • Puns may have serious or humorous uses. • In Romeo and Juliet as Mercutio is dying, he says, “Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man.”
Irony – contradiction between what is real and what is expected • Verbal irony – when what is said has a different meaning than what is normally intended. • It is simple to stop smoking. I’ve done it many times.
Situational Irony - When what happens contradicts what is expected. • For example, Romeo tries to make peace with the Capulets, ends up killing Tybalt, and is banished. • Dramatic Irony – When the audience knows something the characters do not. • For example, we know Juliet is not dead. Romeo believes she is dead and stabs himself (dummy).
Sarcasm • A type of irony in which a person appears to be praising something while he is actually insulting it. • As I fell down the stairs head-first, I heard her say, “Look at that coordination.”
Antithesis • A direct contrast of structurally parallel word groupings generally for the purpose of contrast • sink or swim
Apostrophe • A form of personification in which the absent or dead are spoken to as if present • Oh William Shakespeare, What dost thou mean by thy ramblings? • Or • The inanimate is spoken to as if it is animate (alive).
Allusion • A reference to a mythological, literary, historical, or Biblical person, place, or thing. • Hey Romeo, cool your jets and get your hands off my daughter!
Synecdoche (Si-neck-da-key) • A form of metaphor • A part of something is used to signify the whole. • Also, the reverse can be true where the whole can represent the part. • Canada played the U.S. in the hockey finals. (In reality, the Canadian team, played the U.S. team, not the entire country.)
Synecdoche (cont’d) • Another form involves the container representing the thing being contained. • the pot is boiling. (In reality, the pot isn’t boiling, just the water in it). • Also, it can involve the material from which an object is made standing for the object. • The quarterback tossed the pigskin.
Metonymy • The name of one thing is applied to another thing with which it is closely associated • I love Shakespeare. • (A person doesn’t really love the man; he really means he loves to read Shakespeare’s plays.)