Lit week 3

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Slide 1: Slide
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This lesson contains 52 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 1 video.

time-iconLesson duration is: 30 min

Items in this lesson

Welcome v6

Slide 1 - Slide

Homework check

Slide 2 - Slide

1. Shakespeare is England’s most famous playwright and
A
Musician
B
Poet
C
Wanderer
D
Actor

Slide 3 - Quiz

2. He also introduced a lot of
A
Well-known phrases
B
Films
C
Havoc
D
Nothing

Slide 4 - Quiz

3. His plays are known throughout the world, and he introduced up …….. words
A
500
B
100
C
3000
D
1500

Slide 5 - Quiz

4 He was born in the city of ……
A
Yorkshire
B
Manchester
C
Stratford-upon-Avon
D
Bolton

Slide 6 - Quiz

5 He was born in….
A
1564
B
1455
C
1667
D
1781

Slide 7 - Quiz

6 He married….
A
Marie Antoinette
B
Anna Hathaway
C
Chloe Petra
D
Mary queen of Scots

Slide 8 - Quiz

7 He had ……. Children
A
Seven
B
Four
C
Six
D
Three

Slide 9 - Quiz

8 Together with his co-players he built his own theatre called…
A
The Globe
B
Odeon
C
Cinemax
D
Fox

Slide 10 - Quiz

9 He performed many times for….
A
Elizabeth the second
B
Elizabeth the first
C
Mary the first
D
Mary the second

Slide 11 - Quiz

10 In his will he left ……… to his wife
A
all his belongings
B
his second best bed
C
all his literary works
D
nothing at all

Slide 12 - Quiz

11 He died in ……..
A
1599
B
1603
C
1616
D
1634

Slide 13 - Quiz

The plot of Romeo and Juliet 
Read the statements about Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet. Some are true and others are false. 

Slide 14 - Slide

1. The plot of Romeo and Juliet is based on a French tale.
A
True
B
False

Slide 15 - Quiz

3. The story takes place in 1302.
A
True
B
False

Slide 16 - Quiz

4. The play is set in Venice, Italy.
A
True
B
False

Slide 17 - Quiz

5. After the prologue it begins with a street fight between Montague and Capulet servants.
A
True
B
False

Slide 18 - Quiz

6. Romeo first sees Juliet at a ball in the Montague house.
A
True
B
False

Slide 19 - Quiz

7. With the help of Benvolio, they are secretly married the next day.
A
True
B
False

Slide 20 - Quiz

8. Romeo kills Juliet’s cousin, Tybalt, in revenge for his killing Romeo’s close friend and ally, Mercutio.
A
True
B
False

Slide 21 - Quiz

9. Because of this execution, Romeo is forced to leave Verona.
A
True
B
False

Slide 22 - Quiz

10. Juliet’s mother offers her a drug that will put her into a coma for ‘two and forty hours’ on the night before her planned wedding to Paris.
A
True
B
False

Slide 23 - Quiz

11. When Juliet is found, she is believed to be dead.
A
True
B
False

Slide 24 - Quiz

12. Romeo buys poison to kill himself when he hears the 'news' about Juliet's death.
A
True
B
False

Slide 25 - Quiz

13. When Juliet awakens from her deep sleep, she realizes Romeo is dead and, panicking, she runs away.
A
True
B
False

Slide 26 - Quiz

In pairs: explain the Prologue to each other (next slide).

Slide 27 - Slide

timer
4:00

Slide 28 - Slide

Slide 29 - Slide

Do assignment 1 (pp 23, 24)
Homework: do assignment 1a, b

Slide 30 - Slide

Welcome back

Slide 31 - Slide

Metaphysical poetry

Slide 32 - Slide

Why this kind of poetry?
It was a reaction to the overly elevated language used by 'poets' in the Renaissance.

Slide 33 - Slide

Meta-physical
Beyond - science / concrete things
  1. A careful balance between reason and emotion
  2. A surprising image or idea is presented in the opening lines to immediately grab the reader's attention.
  3. The poems interweave lofty, educated language with rather coarse English
  4. The poems reproduce the rhythm of spoken English, with unexpected breaks and changes of tempo (changes in metre)
  5. Extensive use is made of conceits --> 

Slide 34 - Slide

Conceit
A conceit is a metaphor. 
-Very often two unlikely things are compared.
-The metaphor is extended (= longer and more complex than usual)
-Quite often it contains a scientific element

Example: two lovers are compared to two hemispheres forming one perfect and complete world.

Slide 35 - Slide

The Good Morrow - stanza 1
I wonder, by my troth, what thou and I
Did, till we loved? Were we not weaned till then?
But sucked on country pleasures, childishly?
Or snorted we in the Seven Sleepers’ den?
’Twas so; but this, all pleasures fancies be.
If ever any beauty I did see,
Which I desired, and got, ’twas but a dream of thee.

a child is weaned when it no longer breastfeeds
The Seven Sleepers slept in a cave for 300 years 

Slide 36 - Slide

What did they do till they
loved one another?

Slide 37 - Mind map

The Good Morrow - stanza 2
And now good-morrow to our waking souls,
Which watch not one another out of fear;
For love, all love of other sights controls,
And makes one little room an everywhere.
Let sea-discoverers to new worlds have gone,
Let maps to other, worlds on worlds have shown,
Let us possess one world, each hath one, and is one.

They don't fear. But what is it they don't fear?
(Hint: what do lovers sometimes fear?)
The 17th century was the time of the great explorations and discoveries

Slide 38 - Slide

"And makes one little room an everywhere"

What is the little room? (no, not the toilet!)

Slide 39 - Open question


Let sea-discoverers to new worlds have gone,
Let maps to other, worlds on worlds have shown,
Let us possess one world, each hath one, and is one.



What are the lovers compared to? (What is the conceit?)

Slide 40 - Open question

The Good Morrow - stanza 3
My face in thine eye, thine in mine appears,
And true plain hearts do in the faces rest;
Where can we find two better hemispheres,
Without sharp north, without declining west?
Whatever dies, was not mixed equally;
If our two loves be one, or, thou and I
Love so alike, that none do slacken, none can die.

Hemisphere = 1/2 of the globe
Plato believed that things and people could go on for ever if their components were mixed perfectly

Slide 41 - Slide

"Without sharp north, without declining west?"

Why is the north a bad place?

Slide 42 - Open question

"My face in thine eye, thine in mine appears"

That's how close they are. What are the eyes compared to?

Slide 43 - Open question

"Without sharp north, without declining west?"

Why is the west a bad place?

Slide 44 - Open question

"If our two loves be one, or, thou and I
Love so alike, that none do slacken, none can die."
How exactly does the poet reason death away?

Slide 45 - Open question

Metaphysical
Meta: Beyond -  Physical: concrete things
  1. A careful balance between reason and emotion
    Emotion:The poem discusses both their deep love and how they deal with their fear to lose each other 
    Reason: The perfect unity of the lovers is represented by two hemispheres, the immortality  by Plato's philosophy about perfectly balanced components.
  2. A surprising image or idea is presented in the opening lines to immediately grab the reader's attention.
    Here it's a non-poetic exclamation (about a boring time before they met) to introduce their perfect happiness now. 'By my troth' is quite vulgar.

Slide 46 - Slide

3 The poems interweave lofty, educated language with rather coarse English
Lines 1-4 are non-poetic, the rest is more educated.
4 The poems reproduce the rhythm of spoken English, with unexpected
 breaks and changes of tempo (changes in metre)
The many commas make it quite irregular in rhythm. Clauses like 'each hath one, and is one' break the iambic metre.
5 Extensive use is made of conceits --> The image of the two worlds, getting concentrated into one world consisting of two hemispheres, which stand for Plato's perfectly mixed components that are able to defeat death.

Slide 47 - Slide

The following video explains metaphysical poetry once again.

watch later if you like

Slide 48 - Slide

Slide 49 - Video

Do assignments 1c, 2
1c: do NOT use the poem "The Good Morrow" for your examples.
timer
20:00

Slide 50 - Slide

Analysing Love III

Slide 51 - Slide

Homework
Finish and learn chapter 3

Slide 52 - Slide