Saturday, September 21, 2013
Shakespeare's "The Hollow Crown": Watch Now!
Last night, PBS played the first installment of their new Shakespeare Histories series, starting with Richard II. If you missed it, you can watch the entire show on their website (it's about 2.5 hours long). Though we're not reading any of this plays in this class, you might be interested in watching Richard II, which shares many of the same themes as The Sonnets, as do the subsequent history plays. Click on the link below to watch--but don't forget to read The Sonnets (assignment below).
Friday, September 20, 2013
For Monday: The Sonnets, Part 3, "My Love Was My Decay" & Sonnet Recitation Assignment
For Monday: The Sonnets, Part 3: “My Love Was My Decay”:
61, 62, 65, 68, 71, 72, 73, 76, 78, 80
For Monday’s class, I only have one ‘question’ for you to
answer: I want you to choose one of the poems above and analyze it in a close
reading response. This means that
you will examine the poem line by line, exploring how the poem uses metaphors,
images, puns, suggestions, and even sounds to make its points. Read carefully and be sure to analyze
throughout—explain why you see what you do, and help us ‘see’ where you
found the clues to decipher (or at least make sense of) the poem. The key here is to quote words or lines and
then discuss them, rather than simply summarizing what the entire poem
‘means.’ Writing a close reading is an
act of discovery: you’ll learn a lot more as you do it than you could ever know
before you started. As you analyze the
poem, look for some of the common themes of the Sonnets: increasing,
immortality, acting, reflecting, social barriers, etc.
* * * The Sonnet Recitation
Assignment! Due by Friday, October 11th * * *
At some point in the next 3 weeks, I want you to choose
one of Shakespeare’s Sonnets to memorize and recite to me in my
office. You may choose any Sonnet, even
one we didn’t read or discuss in class.
Once you’re ready, you can either schedule a time to recite it or just
come to my office hours: MWF 9-10, 1-3, or TR 1-3. I will follow along in the book, and as long
as you have 95% accuracy, you’ll get full points for the memorization.
ALSO—I want you to turn in a typed 1-2 page close reading
of the poem, examining how you read the poem and why you see it this
way. And yes, you can do the same poem
from your close reading assignment (above).
This assignment is worth 10% of your grade and must be
concluded before or by Friday, October 11th. Please do not dread this assignment or worry
about embarrassing yourself. I just want
to see you enjoy the beauty of Shakespeare’s verse and have something in your
memory that can potentially last a lifetime.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
For Friday: "The Master Mistress of My Passion" (The Sonnets, Part 2)
For Friday:
The Sonnets, Nos. 20, 22, 23, 29, 30, 33, 36, 40, 41, 42, 46, 55
4. Sonnets 40-42 reveal a new character in the Sonnet sequence: who is this person, and what is his/her relationship to the lovers? How does the poet use this new character to explore the drama of a Spring/Autumn relationship and the perils of falling in love and risking heartbreak?
The Sonnets, Nos. 20, 22, 23, 29, 30, 33, 36, 40, 41, 42, 46, 55
NOTE: I’m skipping around a
bit since there is literally so much going on in these Sonnets. Feel free to read the entire range of 20-60,
but these are the ones I want to focus on in class, since they hit many of the
high points As before, read them all but
focus on a few to re-read and closely examine.
Answer TWO of the
following...
1. Where in these new
sonnets do we get a sense of who the ‘players’ are? (we can’t assume it’s
Shakespeare and Henry Wroithsley—or even another candidate, William
Herbert). What might be their social
classes? Ages? Feelings toward one another? Complications? Attachments with other characters not
directly seen? Quote a line or two to
support your readings.
2. In this group we see an
increasing—though subtle—use of theatrical metaphors. How does Shakespeare employ metaphors and
ideas from the stage to illustrate some aspect of love, relationships, or
growing old? Do any of these remind you
of other ideas/works of Shakespeare?
3. Around Sonnet 33
something has changed in the relationship between the poet and the ‘young man’:
are there any clues to reveal what happened?
Did someone betray the other? Was
something discovered? Was something
said? Consider specifically the
metaphors Shakespeare uses in Sonnet 33—the rising sun, the mountains, the
“ugly rack” and the “region cloud” (though you don’t have to focus solely on
this poem).
4. Sonnets 40-42 reveal a new character in the Sonnet sequence: who is this person, and what is his/her relationship to the lovers? How does the poet use this new character to explore the drama of a Spring/Autumn relationship and the perils of falling in love and risking heartbreak?
Monday, September 16, 2013
For Wednesday: "Thine Image Dies With Thee" (Reading the Sonnets)
For Wednesday:
Shakespeare’s Sonnets, Nos. 2-19
Answer TWO of the
following...
1. Which poem in this
sequence do you feel is the most persuasive in urging the young man to
“breed”? How does the poet make his
argument, and what images/metaphors make it seem compelling to you?
2. All of these poems, to
some extent, are about the conflict between Time/Death and
Immortality/Beauty. Why might this be a
subject of particular interest in the Renaissance? Which poem or poems do you feel illustrates
the conflict particularly well—and why?
3. A few of the poems are
explicitly about writing poems and the role of poetry in the art of love. How does Shakespeare use poetry itself as a
way to make his argument and/or urge the young man to ‘procreate’? ‘’
4. Where in one or more of
these sonnets do we get the sense that the poet’s interest in the young man is
more than platonic? Where might love
play a role in the argument—and why? Be
specific and cite a line or two that might support your reading.
Shakespeare’s Sonnets, Nos. 2-19
NOTE: Don’t read the poems
like our previous works; they are not a narrative per se, though there is a
rough story connecting them together (which critics violently disagree
on). Try to read the poems one at a
time, and try to re-read them a few times.
You don’t have to read every poem
in this sequence, but I would try to read them all and then go back and read a
few carefully. The Sonnets yield their treasures slowly and not in one
sitting. Don’t be discouraged if you
don’t “get it” after a first or second read.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
For Friday: 100 Years of Gawain Criticism
For Friday:
Adding to
Anonymous—the Criticism of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Choose one of the following essays in the back of our
edition of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight to read and respond to for
Friday. Of course, you can read more
than one essay—or indeed, all of them!—but only answer the questions below in
regard to a single essay. Try to choose
a general topic or essay that interests you, since you will be using this later
on Paper #1 (if you choose to do it).
ESSAYS (Read ONE, your choice):
·
Burrow, “Recognition and Confession at the Green
Chapel” (pp.104-113)
·
Davenport, “The Hero and His Adventure” (pp.131-143)
·
Hanna III, “Unlocking What’s Locked: Gawain’s Green
Girdle” (pp.144-158)
·
Johnson, “Regenerative Time in Sir Gawain and the
Green Knight” (pp.158-173)
·
Nicholls, “The Testing of Courtesy at Camelot and
Hautdesert” (pp.173-194)
·
Heng, “Feminine Knots and the Other Sir Gawain and
the Green Knight” (pp.194-213)
QUESTIONS (answer 2 of the following...)
1. What common assumptions about the poem does this author
acknowledge and then either try to expand, complicate, or refute? What did he/she think other readers (or
critics) had missed before them?
2. In general, how did this essay help you understand a
specific aspect of Sir Gawain that you either didn’t understand or
didn’t see before? Cite a specific
passage that you feel does this particularly well.
3. Is there a passage or idea in this essay you either
don’t agree with or simply don’t understand?
Why is this? Explain how you
either don’t get or don’t agree with this passage. Be specific—don’t say “I didn’t get the entire essay, etc.”
Friday, September 6, 2013
For Monday: Part IV of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
For Friday's class, try to finish Sir Gawain and the Green Knight; there are no questions, but I will offer you a intriguing in-class writing question for Monday. Also, be sure you have the correct edition of the text, since we will be reading essays from the back next week; if not, I will be able to make a few photocopies for suitably penitent pupils. :)
For those of you interested in the culture of 14th century England/Europe, as well as chivalric romances, here is a You Tube clip of a chanson (romance set to music, usually about chivalric love) by Guilluame Machaut, a famous French composer of the time and a contemporary of the Gawain poet. This is the music troubadours would have sung in court and inspired knights to seek the attentions of a beautiful maiden to perform heroic deeds for...or, in a less exalted mood, simply shag in the closet. Either way, it gives you a sense of what this world sounded like at the time; it makes good background music while reading Part IV!
For those of you interested in the culture of 14th century England/Europe, as well as chivalric romances, here is a You Tube clip of a chanson (romance set to music, usually about chivalric love) by Guilluame Machaut, a famous French composer of the time and a contemporary of the Gawain poet. This is the music troubadours would have sung in court and inspired knights to seek the attentions of a beautiful maiden to perform heroic deeds for...or, in a less exalted mood, simply shag in the closet. Either way, it gives you a sense of what this world sounded like at the time; it makes good background music while reading Part IV!
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
For Friday: Part III of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Reading/Discussion Question for
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Part III
DEFINITION OF
ALLEGORY:
“An allegory is a
narrative fiction in which the agents and actions, and sometimes the setting as
well, are contrived to make coherent sense on the “literal” or primary, level
of signification, and at the same time to signify a second, correlated order of
agents, concepts, and events. We can
distinguish two main types: (1) historical and political allegory…and (2) the
allegory of ideas, in which the literal characters represent abstract concepts
and the plot exemplifies a doctrine or thesis…The central device in the second
type, the sustained allegory of ideas, is the personification of abstract entities such as virtues, vices, states
of mind, modes of life, and types of character” (from M.H. Abrams, A Glossary of Literary Terms).
YOUR RESPONSE:
After reading Parts
III, examine a section of the text (a short passage, no more than a page or
two) that you feel can be read allegorically.
Consider how the poet writes a poetic narrative that functions on two
levels, and what clues suggest his multiple meanings. What ideas or concepts are personified,
and what “doctrine or thesis” might your reading lead to? Write a developed response of at least a
full page (double spaced), though you can go to town if you wish.
NOTE: If you’re
stumped, consider nature/weather imagery, the various hunt episodes, and the
“challenge” that Gawain faces in the Lord’s castle.
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