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Background Notes Station

Background Notes Station. Set up 2-column Cornell Notes in your Composition Book. Use your note-taking skills to determine Unit Title and Big Ideas. Summarize your understanding of the information in your right-hand column. Romeo and Juliet By William Shakespeare. Summary.

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Background Notes Station

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  1. Background Notes Station Set up 2-column Cornell Notes in your Composition Book. Use your note-taking skills to determine Unit Title and Big Ideas. Summarize your understanding of the information in your right-hand column.

  2. Romeo and Juliet By William Shakespeare

  3. Summary Romeo and Juliet is a story about two teenagers who fall in love but are forbidden to see each other by their parents. They meet one night at a party (Romeo is actually there to check out another girl, Rosaline) and quickly fall in love. Unfortunately, Juliet’s parents already have a husband picked out for her. So, the two decide to get married and enlist the help of Juliet’s nurse to act as a messenger between the two and Friar Laurence who agrees to marry them. However, plans go awry after Romeo is banished from Verona and doesn’t get filled in on the plans that Juliet has for them to live happily ever after…

  4. Setting The story is set in the late 1500’s mostly in the town of Verona, Italy. However, there are a few acts set in Mantua, Italy a smaller town just a few miles away.

  5. Timeline Sunday – Act One Monday – Act Two Tuesday – Act Three Wednesday – Act Four Thursday – Act Five

  6. The Feud Romeo’s family, the Montagues, have a long standing feud with Juliet’s family, the Capulets. While the audience never learns about the source of the ancient quarrel, we do learn that it has recently grown stronger.

  7. Comedy and Tragedy Romeo and Juliet begins as a comedy but ends as a tragedy Elements of a tragedy • Must have a tragic hero/heroine • Ends in the death of many of the main characters Elements of a comedy • A struggle of young lovers to overcome difficulty that is often presented by elders • Separation and unification • Heightened tensions, often within a family The shift from comedy to tragedy is what sets Romeo and Juliet apart from the rest of Shakespeare’s plays

  8. Themes Love • The power of love • Love as a cause for violence Fate • The inevitability of fate Hate • Hate as a forced emotion

  9. Writing Style Much of Romeo and Juliet is written as a sonnet, a poem of 14 lines written and rhymed in iambic pentamenter. Each sonnet ends with a couplet. A couplet is two consecutive lines that rhyme. Iambic pentamenter refers to the rhyme scheme of a sonnet: A – B – A – B – C – D – C – D – E – F – E – F – G - G

  10. Plagiarism!? Shakespeare did not invent the story of Romeo and Juliet. A poet named Arthur Brooks wrote the story of Romeus and Juliet as a long poem that was itself not original, but rather an adaptation of adaptations that stretched across nearly a hundred years and two languages. Many of the details of Shakespeare’s plot are taken directly from Brooks’ poem, including the meeting of Romeo and Juliet at the ball, their secret marriage, Romeo’s fight with Tybalt, the sleeping potion, and the timing of their suicides.

  11. Interesting… The Italian city of Verona, where Romeo and Juliet lived, receives about 1,000 letters addressed to Juliet every Valentine's Day. “Star-crossed lovers” refers to two people who are in love but have conflicting astrological signs. In Shakespeare’s times, people believed the course of their lives was determined by the exact second they were born.

  12. Verona Today Today, Verona has an incredible amount of graffiti, which is legal, provided that you are writing about your love for someone.

  13. Character Sorting Station Use your critical analysis skills to determine which characters were loyal to which family. Keep in mind, Ol’ Shakespeare was very purposeful in his name choices, so he used a pattern to help you solve this puzzle! 

  14. Montague vs. Capulet

  15. Flipbook Station

  16. Making your Flipbook • You will need 5 pieces of unlined paper • Make mark ½ in from the bottom lengthwise on both ends • Set one paper on top of another, lining it up with the ½ in mark, so that all 5 papers are visible. • Fold in half using the ruler, leaving you with 9 ½ in tabs to label and a larger title tab.

  17. Romeo and Juliet:Whose fault is it? • Romeo • Balthasar & Benvolio • Mercutio & Lord and Lady Montague • Juliet & Nurse • Tybalt & Lord and Lady Capulet • Paris, Prince, and Friar • Youth & Innocence • Adult Interference • Fate &/or Chance

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