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Title: Written by: Jonnette Hay-Rivenbark


1
Written byJonnette Hay-Rivenbark
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English Renaissance
  • Cultural and artistic movement in England
  • 16th century through early 17th century
  • Associated with European Renaissance
  • Believed to have begun in Italy

3
English Renaissance
  • Contrast English and Italian Renaissance

4
English Renaissance
  • Often called Age of Shakespeare or Elizabethan
    Era
  • Names are incorrect

5
English Renaissance
  • Important playwrights
  • William Shakespeare
  • Ben Jonson
  • Christopher Marlowe

6
English Renaissance
  • Important poets of the period
  • Edmund Spenser
  • John Milton
  • Important philosophers
  • Sir Francis Bacon
  • Sir Thomas More

7
Elizabethan Era
  • Period in England associated with rule of Queen
    Elizabeth I (1558-1603)
  • Relatively peaceful time

8
Elizabethan Era
  • Considered Golden Age of English history

9
Elizabethan Era
  • Height of fashion in England
  • Influenced by French and Spanish styles

10
Elizabethan Era
  • Annual festivities broke up daily life
  • People looked forward to celebrations
  • Many still celebrated today

11
Elizabethan Era
  • Other celebrations include
  • Valentines Day
  • April Fools Day
  • Christmas Season (13 days celebrated from
    Christmas Eve through Epiphany Eve)

12
The Plague
  • Bubonic and pneumonic plagues caused 14th century
    Black Death
  • Spread through Europe, Middle East and Asia
  • Recurred every generation for centuries

13
The Plague
  • Known as bubonic and pneumonic plagues
  • Believed to be caused mainly by fleas
  • Symptoms included fever, chills, muscle pain,
    hemorrhaging,and buboes

14
The Plague
  • Occurred again in England during 1592-1593
  • Caused all theaters in London to close
  • Shakespeare wrote long, narrative poems

15
Shakespeare Biography
  • Born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon
  • Actual date of birth uncertain

16
Biography
  • Father was John Shakespeare

17
Biography
  • At 18 married Anne Hathaway
  • At 19 had daughter
  • 1585 had twins

18
Biography
  • Believed to have left for London 1585-1586
  • 1594 became member of Lord Chamberlains Men
  • Troupe became Kings Men in 1603

19
Shakespeares London - Video
Single click screen to view video
20
Biography
  • Wrote and performed in plays
  • Most widely-read playwright
  • Also wrote poetry

21
Shakespeares Plays
  • Shakespeare wrote or collaborated on 39 plays
  • Plays divided into three categories
  • Comedies
  • Tragedies
  • Histories

22
Shakespeares Plays
  • His plays remain popular today
  • Have been made into films and other plays

Single click for audio clip gtgtgtgt
23
The Comedies
  • Alls Well That Ends Well
  • As You Like It
  • The Comedy of Errors
  • Cymbeline
  • Loves Labors Lost
  • Measure for Measure
  • The Merchant of Venice

24
The Comedies
  • The Merry Wives of Windsor
  • A Midsummer Nights Dream
  • Much Ado About Nothing
  • Pericles
  • The Taming of the Shrew
  • The Tempest
  • Troilus and Cressida

25
The Comedies
  • Twelfth Night
  • Two Gentlemen of Verona
  • The Two Noble Kinsmen
  • The Winters Tale

26
The Comedies
  • Most popular include
  • Alls Well That Ends Well
  • The Merchant of Venice
  • A Midsummer Nights Dream
  • The Taming of the Shrew
  • The Tempest

Single click for audio clip gtgtgtgt
27
The Comedies Themes
  • Characteristics of the comedies include
  • False/mistaken identities
  • Toils of love and marriage
  • Good versus Evil
  • Songs written for comedies
  • Only text exists


28
The Comedies
  • Famous characters include
  • Oberon and Titania (A Midsummer Nights Dream)
  • Rosalind and Orlando (As You Like It)
  • Petruchio and Katherine (Taming of the Shrew)

29
The Tragedies
  • Antony and Cleopatra
  • Coriolanus
  • Hamlet
  • Julius Caesar
  • King Lear
  • Macbeth

30
The Tragedies
  • Othello
  • Romeo and Juliet
  • Timon of Athens
  • Titus Andronicus

31
The Tragedies
  • Most popular tragedies
  • Hamlet
  • Julius Caesar
  • Macbeth
  • Romeo and Juliet

Single click for audio clips gtgtgtgt
32
The Tragedies Themes
  • All Shakespearean tragedies protagonist falls
    from grace and dies
  • Tragic hero, tragic flaw
  • An unhappy ending

33
The Tragedies
  • Usually many secondary characters die
  • Mercutio and Tybalt (Romeo and Juliet)
  • Polonius, Ophelia, King Claudius, Queen Gertrude,
    Laertes (Hamlet)
  • Calpurnia, Portia, Cassius (Julius Caesar)

34
The Tragedies
  • Protagonist is admirable but flawed
  • Protagonist is capable of good and bad
  • Famous tragic characters
  • Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
  • Macbeth, Thane of Glamis
  • Marcus Brutus

35
The Histories
  • King John
  • Richard II
  • Henry IV, Part I
  • Henry IV, Part 2
  • Henry V

36
The Histories
  • Henry VI, Part 1
  • Henry VI, Part 2
  • Henry VI, Part 3
  • Richard III
  • Henry VIII

37
The Histories
  • Easier to recognize than define
  • Arose as patriotism formed in England
  • Tied closely to real historical events

38
The Histories Themes
  • All focus on tensions between public and private
    values
  • Have character preoccupied with power
  • Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra considered
    Roman histories

39
Shakespeares Poetry
  • Wrote two narrative poems during plague years
  • Dedicated to Earl of Southampton

40
Earl of Southampton- Video
Single click screen to view video
41
Poetry
  • Other narrative poems The Phoenix and the
    Turtle and A Lovers Complaint
  • Sonnets are most well-known
  • Form is fourteen lines of iambic pentameter

42
Poetry
  • Published 154 sonnets
  • First 17 thought written to young man
  • Advises young man to marry, have a child

43
Poetry
  • Sonnets 18-126 written to young man
  • Celebrate speakers love for young man

Single click for audio clip gtgtgtgt
44
Poetry
  • Sonnets 127-154 present the Dark Lady
  • Woman presented as treacherous
  • Speaker seems sexually obsessed with her

45
The Globe Theatre
  • Theater associated with Shakespeare
  • Built in London in 1599
  • Owned by the Burbage brothers, Shakespeare and
    three others

46
The Globe Theatre
  • The Heavens
  • False ceiling over the stage
  • Housed actors and costumes during bad weather
  • Designed with trap doorsactors could fly
  • Good for creating sound effects

47
The Globe Theatre
  • Hell
  • Trapdoors within the stage area (thought to be
    two)
  • Used for special effects with actors
  • Good for creating sound effects

48
The Globe Theatre
  • Women prohibited from performing

49
The Globe Theatre
  • Open to audiences during summer months
  • Daytime performances only
  • Audiences came from all classes
  • Men and women attended performances

50
Performance Video
Single click screen to view video
51
The Globe Theatre
  • Groundlings paid one cent to stand
  • Gentry paid more for seats in galleries
  • Nobles sat in chairs on side of stage

52
The Globe Theatre
  • Style similar to Coliseum
  • Sometimes used for gambling
  • Closed due to plague

53
The Globe Theatre
  • Flags used to indicate type of play
  • Burned by cannonball landing on roof
  • Destroyed by Puritans
  • Motto Totus mundus agit histrionem

54
Concluding Thoughts
  • Enduring Globe
  • Enduring Shakespeare
  • He was not of an age, but for all time.
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