POPULAR CULTURE IN THE RENAISSANCE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

POPULAR CULTURE IN THE RENAISSANCE

Description:

Music. Recreation. Religion. Theatre. 3. PURPOSE. The purposes of this project are to: ... Established Genres. Ballads. Plays. 12. LITERACY ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:186
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: facult6
Learn more at: http://faculty.ccri.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: POPULAR CULTURE IN THE RENAISSANCE


1
POPULAR CULTURE IN THE RENAISSANCE
  • A Prismatic Perceptions Project
  • Robin Medeiros
  • Last update 11.9.00

2
POPULAR CULTURE IN THE RENAISSANCE
  • Purpose
  • Definitions of culture
  • Art
  • Dance
  • Fashion
  • Festivals
  • Literature
  • Music
  • Recreation
  • Religion
  • Theatre

3
PURPOSE
  • The purposes of this project are to
  • Provide students with a model for thesis
    statements, outlines, research papers, and the
    MLA citation format (parenthetical and works
    cited).
  • Consider definitions of Popular Culture
  • Discuss various modes of Popular Culture in the
    Renaissance

4
THESIS STATEMENT
  • The study of popular culture is a 20th Century
    phenomenon. However by examining popular culture
    in the Renaissance, we can achieve a greater
    understanding of this historical period, as well
    as those who lived during this time.

5
CONCEPTS OF CULTURE
  • Definition of terms (Storey)
  • What is culture?
  • High culture
  • Low culture
  • Popular culture
  • NOTE Provide examples

6
ART
  • Competitors
  • Strengths
  • Weaknesses

7
DANCE
  • Court vs. folk dances
  • Court dances
  • Galliard
  • Pavane
  • Folk dances

8
FASHION
  • Clothing (Annenberg/CPB)
  • Discuss requirements, benefits, and issues of
    using new procedures

9
FESTIVALS
  • Carnivals
  • Parades
  • Gambling

10
LITERATUREORAL TRADITION
  • Folk humor
  • Proverbs
  • Songs
  • Stories

11
LITERATUREWRITTEN TRADITION
  • Literacy
  • The Written Word
  • Established Genres
  • Ballads
  • Plays

12
LITERACY
  • Great number of ordinary people had some
    knowledge of book learning
  • The world of workseaman, merchants and agents of
    landlords jobs required regular compilation or
    consultation of lists must know alphabet possess
    rudiments of mathematics
  • Richard II (1391)
  • Decreed any parent in the kingdom was free to
    send their child to school, if they could find
    one
  • Formal education
  • (Chamberlain)

13
HISTORY OF THE WRITTEN WORD
  • Handwritten manuscripts
  • Army of copiers (scriptorium) at centers of
    learning at each great court monasteries
  • Reproduction without plan
  • Materials (parchment, vellum)
  • Due to cost, require recycling
  • Vellum scraped down written over (palimpsest)
  • Manuscripts lost forever
  • Archimedes palimpsest (Noel et al.)

14
HISTORY OFTHE WRITTEN WORD
  • Problems
  • Error through ignorance or negligence would
    multiply with successive editions of the work
  • Establishing of the correct text becomes a
    major problem
  • Demand for great works (e.g. The Bible) ensured
    their continued existence
  • Lesser known works
  • Fewer copies/ Lack of interest
  • Disappear for years, if not forever
  • As a result, people continued to struggle with
    problems which had already been solved in
    different places and times

15
HISTORY OFTHE WRITTEN WORD
  • Origins of Printing (Chamberlain)
  • Opened channels of communication
  • Work of the few swiftly available to the many
  • Gutenberg (Rubenstein)
  • The development of movable type
  • 1462--Civil War broke out in Maintz
  • Established printers settle throughout Europe
  • 1476--William Caxton established Englands first
    printing press
  • Earliest use print indulgences
  • (Chamberlain)

16
LITERATUREWRITTEN TRADITION
  • Montaignes poesie populaire
  • Ballads (Legends)
  • Chanson du Roland
  • Orlando Furioso (Online Medieval Classical
    Library)
  • (Bullfinchs Mythology)

17
LITERATUREWRITTEN TRADITION
  • Established Genres
  • Fabliaux (Harvard College)
  • Romance
  • Morte DArthur (Legends)
  • English folk songs
  • Corpus Christi Carol

18
LITERATUREWRITTEN TRADITION--PLAYS
  • Development of the vernacular drama
  • Mystery Plays (Harvard College)
  • Full-textTwycross
  • Four surviving cycles
  • Present the whole history of Mankind from the
    beginning to the Last Judgment
  • Selection of biblical episodes
  • Center on the life and Passion of Christ

19
LITERATUREWRITTEN TRADITION--PLAYS
  • Mystery Plays
  • Written by local clericsuneven quality
  • Joint ecclesiastical and municipal enterprises
  • The Wakefield Master is recognized as the best
    author
  • 2 Shepherds play
  • Part of the Wakefield Cycle (Britannica.com)

20
LITERATUREWRITTEN TRADITION--PLAYS
  • Morality Plays
  • Allegorical dramas
  • Subject not biblical history but the life
    history of an individual as typical Humanism
    Genus or Everyman (The Oxford Illustrated
    History of English Literature)
  • Two surviving examples
  • Castle of Perservance--early 15th Century
  • Everyman--translated from the Dutch, early 16th
    Century
  • (Luminarium)

21
MUSIC
  • Chansons
  • Chanson du Roland
  • Ecclessiastical plainsong
  • Minstrels
  • Troubadours

22
RECREATION
  • Fighting
  • Football
  • Hunting
  • Jousting
  • Wrestling

23
RELIGION
  • High-level overview of progress against schedule
  • On-track in what areas
  • Behind in what areas
  • Ahead in what areas
  • Unexpected delays or issues

24
WORKS CITED
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com