Through a close reading of five key plays (Hamlet, 1600; Othello, 1604/5; King Lear, 1606; The Winter's Tale, 1610/1, The Tempest, 1611) students will explore Shakespeare’s relationship with dramatic form, learning to identify the foundations and evolution of the Shakespearean tragedy, as well as his experimentation with form in his late plays. Each play will be introduced and contextualized through pointed lectures, and then discussed in detail in a Socratic seminar. The plays span the arc of Shakespeare’s career and offer precious insights into the evolution of Shakespeare’s conceptualization of theater, the human experience, and the potential for art to subvert human shortcomings. The changes in Shakespeare's creation of a microcosm and conceptualization of the nature of chaos offer a subtle and often startling portrayal of modernity.
A selection of short critical readings will complement the students' understanding of the plays and of the principles of dramatic form.
List of plays:
Hamlet
Othello
King Lear
The Winter's Tale
The Tempest