Title: WEEK 12 SLIDES
1WEEK 12 SLIDES
2AGENDA
- Homework Check
- Revenge Tragedies
- Dramatis Personae
- Notes and Parts
- Act I
3REVENGE TRAGEDIES
- Revenge is an individual response to an
intolerable wrong or public insult - Revenge almost always follows a devious path
toward its violent end - The avenger is in the grip of an inner
compulsion motivated by an institutional failure
(justice in the hands of criminal) - Revengers need their victims to know what is
happening and why (satisfaction) - Universally imperative stronger than religious
convictions
4Dramatis Personae
- Ghost, Claudius, Gertrude, Hamlet
- Polonius, Laertes, Ophelia
- Horatio, Rosencrantz, Gildenstern
- Bernardo, Francisco, Marcellus
- Fortinbras
5NOTES
- Using your play, organize your notes into acts
and scenes - Leave enough room for
- a visual
- a title
6AGENDA
- List of Parts
- Act I
- Stand and unfold yourself!
7Stand and Unfold Yourself
- With your partner, memorize the first six lines
of Act I, scene I - Block your scene, i.e., make sure you are
standing and moving exactly how this would be
staged
8NOTES
- Create and title and symbol for the first scene
in Hamlet
9AGENDA
- Choice Reading
- Shakespeare Clip
- Horatios Speech
- Act I, scene ii
10(No Transcript)
11SHAKESPEARE LIFE
12ACT I, SCENE 1
- Early-modern language is not easybut you will
get the hang of it! - Read Horatios speech and explicate (unfold) its
meaning he is describing why everyone is so
worried WHY Fortinbras wants to attack
(1.1.84-111)
13ACT I, SCENE ii
14AGENDA
- Choice reading
- Act I, scene ii
15ACT I, SCENE ii
16TITLE AND VISUAL
- Add a title and visual representation to notes
for Act I, scene ii
Hamlet and Horatio Meet Again
17ACT I, SCENE iii
18ACT I, SCENE iv
19ACT I, SCENE v
20AGENDA
- Choice Reading
- Finish Movie Clip
- Dialectical Journal
- Multiple-Choice Question
21Mel Gibson as Hamlet
22- Begin Dialectical Journal
Act/scene
Quote or text reference
Reaction/explication
The queen is trying to get Hamlet to forget about
being depressed. Nighted color must be a black
mood. She wants him to forget about his father
and, instead, think about the future of Denmark.
1.2. 68
Good Hamlet, cast thy nighted color off, / And
let thine eye look like a friend on Denmark. / Do
not with thy vailèd lids / Seek for thy noble
father in the dust.
23DIALECTIC JOURNALS
- Exchange journals with your partner, noting the
selected quotes and their reactions - Make two marginal notes next to their quote
explications
Act/scene
Quote or textual reference
Reaction/explication
The queen is trying to get Hamlet to forget about
being depressed. Nighted color must be a black
mood. She wants him to forget about his father
and, instead, think about the future of Denmark.
Good Hamlet, cast thy nighted color off, / And
let thine eye look like a friend on Denmark. / Do
not with thy vailèd lids / Seek for thy noble
father in the dust.
1.2. 68
What about the vailèd lids part? She is telling
him he doesnt have his eyes wide open, so he
cant see the situation clearly.