Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time

(12 Einträge)

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 1. and 2. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 1. and 2. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 08. April 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-04-08
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Lecture, Vorlesung, Globe, Globe Theatre, Skull, Crown, Fool's Bauble, Fool's Cap, Motley Dress, Platt,
Identifier: UT_20140408_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 3. and 4. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 3. and 4. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 15. April 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-04-15
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus, Morality, Tragedy, Morality Play, Tragic Hero, Icarus Reading, Faustus, Mephistopheles, Nature of Hell, Helen,
Identifier: UT_20140415_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 5. and 6. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 5. and 6. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 22. April 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-04-22
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, Thomas Kyd, The Spanish Tragedy, Revenge, Dramatic Action, Revenge Tragedy, Ghost, Metatheatrical, Metatheatre,
Identifier: UT_20140422_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 7. and 8. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 7. and 8. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 29. April 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-04-29
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Lecture, Vorlesung, Hamlet, Aristotle, Tragedy, Actors, Action, Inaction, The Self, Humankind, The World, Knowledge,
Identifier: UT_20140429_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 9. and 10. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 9. and 10. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 06. Mai 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-05-06
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, Audience, Actors, Francis Beaumont, The Knight of the Burning Pestle, Play without a Play, London Merchant, Romantic Love Story, Chivalric Romance,
Identifier: UT_20140506_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 11. and 12. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 11. and 12. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 13. Mai 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-05-13
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, All the World's a Stage, As You Like It, Fallen World, Golden World, Lover,
Identifier: UT_20140513_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 13. and 14. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 13. and 14. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 20. Mai 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-05-20
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, Thomas Middleton, Thomas Dekker, The Roaring Girl, Subplots, Character of Mad Moll, Real World, Stage World, Two Languages,
Identifier: UT_20140520_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 15. and 16. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 15. and 16. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 27. Mai 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-05-27
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, Ben Jonson, Volpone, Comedy as Satire, Satire, Objects of Satire, Adoration of Gold, Corruption of the Law, Cleverness, Power, Beasts, Birds, Beast Fable, Commedia dell'arte, Role-Playing, Disguise,
Identifier: UT_20140527_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 17. and 18. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 17. and 18. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 17. Juni 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-06-17
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Lecture, Vorlesung, Honour, Roman Virtue, Julius Caesar, William Shakespeare, Plot, Wordplay, Globe, Revenge Tragedy, Brutus,
Identifier: UT_20140617_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 19. and 20. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 19. and 20. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 24. Juni 2014
Creator: Michael Dobson (author), Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-06-24
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, Michael Dobson, Performance, Amateur Performance, Shakespearean Drama, Royal Shakespeare Company, Open Stages Project, Private Theatre of Kilkenny, Little Theatre Movement, Northern Renaissance, Stockport Garrick Society,
Identifier: UT_20140624_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 21. and 22. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 21. and 22. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 01. Juli 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-07-01
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, King Henry V, William Shakespeare, English History, Imagination, History Plays, Essex Rebellion, Epic Theatre,
Identifier: UT_20140701_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).

Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 23. and 24. Lesson

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Title: Lecture An Introduction to Drama in Shakespeare's Time, 23. and 24. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2014; Dienstag, 08. Juli 2014
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2014-07-08
Subjects: English Literature, Drama, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's Time, Vorlesung, Myth of Failure and Renewal, William Shakespeare, The Winter's Tale, Tragicomedy, Romances, Pitfalls of Perception, Innocence, Art, Nature, Metatheatre,
Identifier: UT_20140708_001_shakedram_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: In this lecture course, a wide range of plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries will be discussed in order to give students an overview of this ‘golden age’ of English drama. Our guiding notion will be the idea of the Early Modern world as a stage on which roles are to be played and plots pursued. We will focus on the following plays: As regards comedy, we will discuss As You Like It (1600) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595) by William Shakespeare; the hilarious metadramatic comedy A Knight of the Burning Pestle (c1607-08) by Francis Beaumont (and John Fletcher); the satirical comedy Volpone (1605-06) by Ben Jonson and the city comedy A Roaring Girl (c1611) by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. In the field of tragedy, our choice is Doctor Faustus (c1592) by Christopher Marlowe, the revenge tragedies The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd (c1587) and Hamlet (c1601) by Shakespeare. Furthermore, we will consider the history plays Julius Caesar (1599) and King Henry V (1600) by Shakespeare, as well as Shakespeare’s romance The Winter’s Tale (c1611).