270 likes | 417 Views
Romeo and Juliet. Forbidden Love and Family Loyalty. The Globe Theater. Who is William Shakespeare?. www.oppidanlibrary.com/shakespeare.htm. www.unplowedground.com/.../travels/travels.html. Who is William Shakespeare?. Born in 1564 to John and Mary Arden Shakespeare 1582: Married to Anne
E N D
Romeo and Juliet Forbidden Love and Family Loyalty
The Globe Theater Who is William Shakespeare? www.oppidanlibrary.com/shakespeare.htm www.unplowedground.com/.../travels/travels.html
Who is William Shakespeare? Born in 1564 to John and Mary Arden Shakespeare 1582: Married to Anne 1583: Birth of Daughter Susanna 1585: Birth of twins: Judith and Hamnet 1587-1592: Established in London as actor/playwright; first work Comedy of Errors
Who is William Shakespeare? 1593: Begins writing sonnets (until 1597-ish) 1594-1596: Some more famous plays Romeo and Juliet and Midsummer Night’s Dream 1597-1608: Best known plays including the rest of the tragedies 1599: The Globe Theatre built 1609: Publication of the Sonnets April 23, 1616: Shakespeare dies
His Works Poetry The Sonnets The Rape of Lucrece Plays Tragedies: Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth Comedies: Much Ado About Nothing Histories: Richard III, Henry V
The Time Period Elizabethan Era The Renaissance Actors were men only Men even played female roles! Plays were one of the main source of entertainment
Three Classifications of Shakespearean Drama: COMEDY HISTORY TRAGEDY
Romeo and Juliet is a… Tragedy
TRAGIC HEROYou will need to know this Qualities of a Tragic Hero: Possesses high importance or rank Exhibits extraordinary talents Displays a tragic flaw—an error in judgment or defect in character—that leads to downfall Faces downfall with courage and dignity
Act I Vocabulary Words adversary –opponent; enemy boisterous – noisily jolly or rowdy nuptial – having to do with marriage or a marriage ceremony augmenting – adding to warrant – swear begot - born
Shakespearian WordsAct I dog – a man of low standing in society, no one wants anything to do with him maidenhead - virginity bite my thumb – the ultimate insult (like giving someone the finger) shrift - confession coz - nephew
BLANK VERSEAct 1 Literary terms Written like poetry But tells a story More free-flowing rules doesn’t have a rhyme scheme or set number of lines, etc. Iambic Pentameter
Iambic PentameterAct 1 Literary Terms Lines have a rhythm to them 10 syllables Pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables He JESTS at SCARS that NEV er FELT a WOUND But SOFT! what LIGHT through YON der WIN dow BREAKS?
SOLILOQUY AND ASIDEAct 1 Literary Terms Soliloquy - Long speech given by a character while alone on stage to reveal his or her private thoughts or intentions Aside - Character’s quiet remark to the audience or another character that no one else on stage is supposed to hear
ConflictAct 1 Literary Terms External Man vs. Man Example: Man vs. Nature Example: Man vs. Society Example: Internal Man vs. himself Example:
FoilAct 1 Literary Terms A character with qualities that are in sharp contrast to another character, thus emphasizing the qualities of each How is Mercutio a foil to Romeo?
Figurative LanguageAct 1 Literary Terms Simile – comparison using “like” or “as” Her face is like a summer’s day… Metaphor – comparison by saying one thing is another; finding similarities in two seemingly unalike things “I am the East, and Juliet is the West…”
Figurative LanguageAct 1 Literary Terms • Pun – play on words • "Vandals destroyed many road signs. They really pulled out all the stops." • Alliteration - group of words that begin with the same letter or sound • desiredoth in his deathbed lie
ForeshadowingAct 1 Literary Terms A hint about what is to come in literature or what the outcome of the conflict will be
Act 1 Literary Terms • Characterization: The way the author describes a character, through dialogue, descriptions, actions and reactions. • Couplet: Two lines that rhyme • Epithet: a characterizing word or phrase firmly associated with a person or thing and often used in place of its actual name
Act 1 Characters • Chorus • Sampson • Gregory • Abram • Benvolio • Tybalt • Capulet • Lady capulet • Montague • Lady Montague • Prince • Romeo • Paris • Peter • Nurse • Juliet • Mercutio • 1stServingman • 2ndservingman • Capulet’s cousin
DRAMATIC IRONYAct 2 Literary Terms Irony—contrast between appearance and reality Dramatic Irony—the audience or reader knows something the character(s) does not know
Act II Vocabulary 1. cunning - skillful, sly, clever 2. vile - repulsive, wicked, disgusting 3. predominant - having superior strength, influence, or authority 4. unwieldy - hard to manage because of size or weight 5. bounty - generosity, something given generously 6. substantial - existing, real, not imaginary 7. imagery - word pictures, words that paint a picture
Act 2 Literary Terms • Analogy: a similarity between like features of 2 things. • Situational irony: When what happens is the opposite of what is expected • Verbal Irony: When what is said is opposite of what is meant • Monologue: a prolonged talk by a single speaker • Oxymoron: “cruel kindness” • Soliloquy: when someone is talking to themselves alonge
Journal Entry Write about a time when you've done something wrong and it's affected others around you. • What did you do? • How did it affect others? • What consequences did you face? • Did you resolve it?
Act 3 Literary Terms • Allusion: a reference to something • Climax: the peak of a story • Dramatic structure: the structure of a story. • Plot Pyramid • Symbol: when an object or word has a figurative and literal meaning.
Do Now Assume that you write an advice column for a newspaper or magazine. A modern day Romeo (or Juliet) writes to you asking for advice. He or she explains what happened at the party and also mentions the family feud. Write what his or her letter says. Write your response