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Shakespeare. Education in Stratford. The Guild of the Holy Cross. School. 'The King's New School of Stratford-upon-Avon'. Schedule. Schedule: Summer 6 AM-5 PM Winter 7 AM-4 PM 12-2PM lunch break. Program.
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Education in Stratford • The Guild of the Holy Cross
School • 'The King's New School of Stratford-upon-Avon'.
Schedule • Schedule: • Summer • 6 AM-5 PM • Winter • 7 AM-4 PM • 12-2PM lunch break
Program • ‘Trivium' of grammar, logic, rhetoric, and the 'quadrivium' of arithmetic, geometry, music and astronomy.
Program • The School concentrated on teaching Latin. • Tudor text-book, Lily's Latin Grammar, served as an introduction to the works of the classical authors. • Boys were punished if they spoke in English to one another instead of Latin.
Sir Hugh Evans • Evans: What is 'lapis', William? • William: A stone. • E: And what is 'a stone', William? • W: A pebble. • E: No, it is 'lapis'... • W: 'Lapis'.
Evans • E: That is a good William. What is he, William, that does lend articles? • W: Articles are borrowed of the pronoun, and be thus declined, Singulariter, nominativo, hic, haec, hoc... • E: What is your genitive case plural, William ? W: Genitive case? • Evans: Ay. • W: Genitive,- horum, harum, horum. (Act 4, Scene 1)
Curriculum • Ovid • Plautus • Terence • Cicero • Quintilian
Curriculum • Students studied and imitated the ancient masters. • The plays of Terence and Plautus introduced the students to the conventions of Roman comedy
Methods • The declamation of Latin speeches from these plays was an important part of the pupils' practice of rhetoric.
Laughter and Elizabethan Society • Cultural Distance • Feste the clown’s lines Twelfth Night 2.3.28-9 “signposts in foreign alphabet;” if we do laugh it is for different reasons. • Social functions of laughter • Perceptions of laughter change • Constant: laughter as a form of coping with anxiety, embarrassment, etc. • Freud: laughter and the subconscious
Everyday laughter • A Hundred Merry Tales (1526) • Narrative + emphasis on wit and word-play • Confrontations: town—country, English—foreigners, educated—uneducated, men—women • Example from Kempe: the country lass
Renaissance perceptions of laughter • Joubert Treatise on Laughter (‘one of the most astounding actions of man’) • Structure • Book 1: physiological description • Book 2: taxonomy • Laughable in deed (accidental versus deliberate) • Accidental: body parts, fall (damage cannot be too serious) • Deliberate: practical jokes, imitation • Laughable in word (stories, wordplay) • Book 3: effects of laughter
Inversion and Laughter • The Lord of Misrule (source Philip Stubbes) • Election followed by an visit to the church during which religious ceremonies were parodied • Saints whose feasts often occasioned inversionary laughter: Nicolas, Thomas, Catherine, also Feast of Epiphany (12th Night)
Bakhtin: • carnival spirit was separate from official celebrations; it offered ‘a second world outside officialdom’ • Carnival laughter attacks all people, including the participants of the carnival; it often brought things to a the materialistic and bodily levels
Shakespeare • Stubbes on Lord of Misrule: ‘Then, every one of these men… with his liveries of green, yellow of some other light and wanton colour…’ • Stockwood 1578: Morris dancers Maygames in the time of divine service… men dancing naked in nets • Theater—the place of freedom replacing the time of freedom
Pieter Brueghel, The Battle Between Carnival and Lent (1559)