Renaissance lesson 2: background, humanism, Thomas More, Utopia

Today:
- Renaissance
- Humanism
- Thomas More
- Utopia

Tuesday 8th of Feb, 1st hour
Test Grammar + Voc!
1 / 29
volgende
Slide 1: Tekstslide
EngelsMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 4

In deze les zitten 29 slides, met interactieve quiz, tekstslides en 2 videos.

time-iconLesduur is: 120 min

Onderdelen in deze les

Today:
- Renaissance
- Humanism
- Thomas More
- Utopia

Tuesday 8th of Feb, 1st hour
Test Grammar + Voc!

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Goal
You learn how 16th century thinking changed the world order and paved the way to today's modern society. 

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 3 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Renaissance
  • Renaissance = ‘rebirth’ 
  • renewed interest in the cultures of ancient Greece and Rome
  •  examples in art, literature and thought (humanism) 
  • Theocentric (God) -> Anthropocentric (Mankind)
  • Memento Mori -> Carpe Diem
  •  Italy: 14th century
  • England: 16th century


Slide 4 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Renaissance
  • Feeling of optimism
- Prospering economy (Queen Elizabeth I) 
- Growth of population
 - Progress in field of science
 - Growing literary 



Slide 5 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Humanism
  • School of philosophy / World-vision
  • Optimistic, human-oriented and forward-looking view of life
  • Individualistic
  • ad fontes: to the sources

Slide 6 - Tekstslide

Humanists believed that it was possible to create an ideal society on earth. 

Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man

Consequences 1
  • Curiosity about the nature of the world (Copernicus)
  • Exploration (Columbus - 1492)
  • Cultural revival -> Art (Da Vinci and Michelangelo)
  • -> Literature (Shakespeare, Spenser, Milton)

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

Scientific experimentation
Copernicus proved that the earth revolved around the sun. Galileo Galilei discovered the telescope and much more

discovered America in 1492

Da Vinci and Michelangelo - drew upon the achievements of classical antiquity. Put your name to your work. 

England mainly in literature
the Reformation
Individualism, look back at the original source (bible), invention of printing press
> Question Organisation of the church

1517 - Martin Luther - 95 theses

Slide 8 - Tekstslide

But this was not the only reason why England broke free of the Roman church. It was as much political s it was cultural. 
Sir Thomas More 
1478-1535

Slide 9 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Sir Thomas More 
  • Son of a famous lawyer
  • He became a brilliant lawyer
  • Was friends with Erasmus 
  • human dignity and tolerance fused with Christian principles
  • Imprisoned and eventually beheaded by Henry VIII for taking the side of the Pope 
  • Best known work is Utopia 
  • criticise contemporary society

Slide 10 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 11 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 14 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 15 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Think about each question on page 13 and then look at the answers. 

Slide 16 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

1
Advantages: a sort of compulsory community service, of the kind that is often suggested nowadays.
Society based on reason. With ideas such as free education, all roles open to everyone, a classless
society and religious tolerance, More was way ahead of his time.

Disadvantages: very communist and strictly organised. There is no room for individuality. You have
no say in where you are sent. Also, you cannot leave the island; you have to stay there. There is no
recreation: no social drinking, no theatre or such like. It all reflects More’s way of life, which consists
only of eating, working and sleeping.

Slide 17 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

2
More suggested that slaves were needed to do the jobs that no one else could or otherwise would do, such as slaughtering livestock

Slide 18 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

3
More was a deeply religious man and a devout Catholic. He regarded non-believers or people with religious doubts as unreliable. When Marx later took the first steps towards a communist society, all religion was banned.

Slide 19 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

4
More was against private ownership, since he felt it was the root of all social evils. Ironically, he was himself very rich.
However, he had a lot of sympathy for people at the lower levels of society, who had to deal with the impact of Henry’s policies.

Slide 20 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

5
Iron is of practical value. It is a hard metal that you can use to make tools and many other useful objects. Gold and silver are soft metals; they are merely decorative because of their shiny
appearance. People value gold and silver because they are rare, but one can argue that they are only valuable because people choose to value them; they have no inherent value.

Slide 21 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

6
The availability of clean air and water is nowadays a topical issue, with all the environmental pollution and the attempts to clean up the world around us.

Slide 22 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

7
Gold and silver are used in Utopia for chamber pots (vessels into which people relieved themselves in the night) – i.e. for the ‘lowest’ imaginable purpose. By creating an image of slaves and criminals in gold and silver chains, and wearing crowns as a mark of shame, More is associating the wearers of
gold chains and crowns in his own society with crime and vilification.

Slide 23 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Did we achieve our goal?
After today (this lesson and next lesson) you know about the history of the 16th century and you will be able to put the literary works that we're going to read in historical context.

Slide 24 - Open vraag

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 25 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

BACKGROUND!

Slide 26 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 27 - Video

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Slide 28 - Video

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Utopia
Choose A, B or C: 
Task A:
Read about Utopia in your reader page 36 - 37  and answer the questions on page 38
Task B:
Read about Utopia via the QR code and answer the 
questions.  
Task C:
Listen to the podcast about Utopia via the QR code
and answer the questions.


Slide 29 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies