1 / 18

Twelfth Night

Twelfth Night. o r, What You Will. William Shakespeare. Little is known of his life Wrote 37 plays, 154 sonnets, and 2 long narrative poems His work is translated into almost every language and is still performed and studied. William Shakespeare. Hometown: Stratford-Upon-Avon, near London

lionel
Download Presentation

Twelfth Night

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Twelfth Night or, What You Will

  2. William Shakespeare • Little is known of his life • Wrote 37 plays, 154 sonnets, and 2 long narrative poems • His work is translated into almost every language and is still performed and studied

  3. William Shakespeare • Hometown: Stratford-Upon-Avon, near London • No University education; only grammar school • 1582: Married Anne Hathaway

  4. The Lost Years • No record of him from 1585-92 • On the run from the law? • A hired hand looking after horses? • A teacher? • Reappears in a drama review: an “upstart crow”

  5. Elizabethan England • Elizabeth I was queen from 1558-1603 • A golden age for England: • Flourishing poetry, literature and theatre • Relative peace and prosperity

  6. Elizabethan London: Cleanliness • Upper class bathed once every couple of weeks; lower class, only a few times a year. • Nature calling? Go in a chamber pot and empty it out your window! • No sewer systems meant horse poop in streets had no way of being washed away.

  7. Elizabethan London: Clothing • Never washed; didn’t want to lose colour. • Puffy sleeves and breeches. • Men and women wore high heeled shoes. • Both sexes used wigs and cosmetics, including white powder for the face. • Children dressed as mini-adults.

  8. Elizabethan London: Clothing • Fabric and colour indicated status. • Nobility: silk, satin, velvet; deep, rich shades • Lower Classes: wool, linen, sheepskin; natural colours (grey, brown, etc.)

  9. Elizabethan London: Food • Mainly meat and bread. Lots of scurvy from lack of vitamins. • No refrigeration. Lots of spices to cover the smell. • Poor cooking of meat led to tapeworms and ringworms. • Unclean water meant people drank a lot of ale or beer; richer people had wine.

  10. Elizabethan London:Entertainment • Archery, bowling, hammer throwing, staff duels and wrestling too slow for you? • Bear baiting • Bull baiting • Dog fights • Cock fights • Hunting and Hawking (upper class)

  11. There were also public executions! The heads of the condemned were put on London Bridge for all to see!

  12. Elizabethan London: Women • Largely uneducated. • No important jobs. • No voting. • Often not given fair trials; some falsely accused of prostitution or witchcraft! • Often used in marriages to solidify ties between families (a symbol of exchange b/w men)

  13. Original Title WHAT YOU WILL Will = want; please; desire What you will = as you desire A play about pursuing desires and having fun

  14. What is Twelfth Night? • …of Christmas; Feast of the Epiphany • Written to be performed for Twelfth Night entertainment • A topsy-turvy time: peasants become kings • A crazy play, full of reversals

  15. Themes • Love • Idealistic vs. rational • Male vs. female • Romantic vs. platonic • Fickle vs. lasting • Over-indulgence of emotions and desires • The folly of thinking too highly of one’s self • Ambition • Appearance vs. Reality • Wisdom vs. Foolishness • Justice, fairness, and revenge • Bullying • Nature of Humanity: Good vs. Evil

  16. Shakespearean Comedy • Young lovers overcoming obstacles • Mistaken identity • Clever plot twists

  17. Shakespearean Comedy • Puns and double entendres • Stock characters • Happy endings

  18. Why Study Shakespeare? • Universal themes • Persistent Human Nature • Good Challenge • Amazing use of English language • Intertextual Connections

More Related