1 / 16

Shakespeare’s Life and Times

Shakespeare’s Life and Times. He was not of an age, but for all time. – Ben Jonson . Life in Renaissance England (1580s and onward). Public sanitation Disease Growing cities Printing and Sailing Politics & religion.

shaw
Télécharger la présentation

Shakespeare’s Life and Times

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Shakespeare’s Life and Times He was not of an age, but for all time. – Ben Jonson

  2. Life in Renaissance England (1580s and onward) • Public sanitation • Disease • Growing cities • Printing and Sailing • Politics & religion

  3. The streets were narrow, cobbled, slippery with the slime of refuse. Houses were crammed together, and there were a lot of furtive alleys. Chamber pots, or jordans, were emptied out of windows. There was no drainage. Fleet Ditch stank to make a man throw up his gorge. But the City had its natural cleansers--the kites, graceful birds that made their nests of rags and refuse in the forks of trees. They scavenged, eating anything with relish. ... And countering the bad, man-made odors, the smells of the countryside floated in. There were rosy milkmaids in the early morning streets, and sellers of newly gathered cresses.

  4. Beginnings • Born April 23, 1564 in Strafford-upon-Avon, England • 103 miles west of London • Court records & plays • John, a leather merchant and local politician • Mary, daughter of wealthy landowner • 1 of 8 children

  5. Marriage • 1582: Married Anne Hathaway, 26, at the age of 18 • She was already pregnant • Gave birth to Susanna • ~1585: had twins, Hamnet and Judith • Lived at Straftford-upon-Avon while WS worked in London

  6. 7 years… • ????????????????????????????????????? • No record exits, “lost years” • Gone into hiding for poaching game on landlord’s property? • Assistant school master? • Starbucks barista?

  7. 1592: He Resurfaces – start 4/11 • Living as an actor and playwright in London • Written criticism of his work: “…an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers…” • Managing partner in Lord Chamberlin’s Men/King’s Men – an acting company in London • Acting company: “sharers” who split profits/debts and acted roles; boy apprentices

  8. Establishing Himself • By 1597: 15/37 plays were published • $$$ & came home once a year • Built Globe Theatre in 1599 • 3 stories high • No roof • Held more than 1,500 spectators • Burnt down in 1613 during Henry VIII because a canon misfired • Entrepreneur and playwright

  9. Rebuilt Globe Theatre

  10. Theatre of the Times… • Actors = all men, young boys played female roles, no kissing/hugging on stage • Groundlings = poor audience member who stood around “pit” and threw rotten vegetables during bad performances • Cost = 1 shilling to attend, 2 shillings to sit in balcony • Expensive seats = behind stage

  11. Special Effects • Mechanisms to lower actors from sky (angels and gods) or bring them below stage by trapdoor (hell/funerals) • Little scenery – dialogue explained setting • Elaborate costumes to tell profession, social class, and family ties • Identity tied to clothing – trickery involved nothing more than changing costumes • Sound effects: thunder, running horses, falling rain, canon blasts, and music

  12. Early Works • Early 1590’s: Histories depicting the destructive results of weak or corrupt rulers (except for Romeo and Juliet) • Richard II • Henry V • Henry VI • Comedies: witty, romantic, charming • A Midsummer Night’s Dream • Much Ado About Nothing • As You Like It

  13. Later Works – After 1600 • Tragedies: vividly capture human temperament, exploring deceit, retribution, betrayal, incest, and moral failure • Hamlet • Othello • Macbeth • Tragi-Comedies: written in final period of life, end in reconciliation and forgiveness, but heavier subject matter than earlier comedies • The Tempest • Cymbeline • The Winter’s Tale

  14. All around… • 36 plays • Longest is Hamlet, at 884,647 words and over 100,000 lines • 154 sonnets • Works translated into 80 different languages • Coined more than 500 new words: amazement, countless, useful, radiance, lackluster, bump, lonely

  15. Controversy • Authorship of plays • Lack of evidence/primary sources and documentation • Education • Literary training • Defense: • Other authors had “sketchy” pasts with little evidence/documentation of histories • His education could have been of high caliber • Circumstantial evidence based on his friendships and relationships

More Related