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Lecture Literature and Culture in Shakespeares Time, 11. Lesson
Bauer, Matthias (2010)
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mla
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Bauer M. "Lecture Literature and Culture in Shakespeares Time, 11. Lesson.", timms video, Universität Tübingen (2010): https://timms.uni-tuebingen.de:443/tp/UT_20100630_001_shakestime_0001. Accessed 27 Apr 2024.
apa
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Bauer, M. (2010). Lecture Literature and Culture in Shakespeares Time, 11. Lesson. timms video: Universität Tübingen. Retrieved April 27, 2024 from the World Wide Web https://timms.uni-tuebingen.de:443/tp/UT_20100630_001_shakestime_0001
harvard
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Bauer, M. (2010). Lecture Literature and Culture in Shakespeares Time, 11. Lesson [Online video]. 30 June. Available at: https://timms.uni-tuebingen.de:443/tp/UT_20100630_001_shakestime_0001 (Accessed: 27 April 2024).
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title: Lecture Literature and Culture in Shakespeares Time, 11. Lesson
alt. title: The Villain and the Sinner
creator: Bauer, Matthias (author)
subjects: Literature, Culture, Shakespeare, Lecture, Vorlesung, Literary Culture, Villain, Sinner, Treason, Treason Act of 1351, Robert Devereux, The French Academie, Traitor, As You Like It, The Winter's Tale, King Lear, Devil, Doctor Faustus, Christopher Marlowe, Vice, Twelfth Night, A Play of Love, John Heywood, Sonnet 62, Il Principe, Niccolo Machiavelli, Richard III, Othello, Edmund
description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2010; Mittwoch, 30. Juni 2010
abstract: The idea of the lecture series is to provide an introduction to Shakespeare and several other authors of his time, as well as to the culture in which they lived. Our focus will be on the idea of the world as a stage and life as a play which was prevalent in Elizabethan and Jacobean England and actually shows the close link between literature and society that existed at the time. The course will be structured according to possible roles that could be played on the stages of the theatre and of life. Each week, a specific role will be outlined both with regard to its function in a wider cultural context and with regard to one or several characteristic literary representations. Similarities and differences will thus become visible. Are, for example, the literary representations of kings and queens (or farmers and shepherds) closely related to their real-life counterparts? Is the courtier a real person or is his whole existence a fiction or performance? Are roles to be considered fixed or is there a possibility of change? In order to answer these and other questions, we will read three plays by Shakespeare (All’s Well that Ends Well, As You Like It, and King Lear), Ben Jonson’s comedy The Alchemist, and poems by Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare, Donne, Herbert and others.
publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
creation date: 2010-06-30
dc type: image
localtype: video
identifier: UT_20100630_001_shakestime_0001
language: eng
rights: Url: https://timmsstatic.uni-tuebingen.de/jtimms/TimmsDisclaimer.html?638498533971104675