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Macbeth Day 6 April 27

Macbeth Day 6 April 27. Agenda. Warm up. Warm up Subtext Inflection review 1.5 – subtext line.

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Macbeth Day 6 April 27

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  1. Macbeth Day 6 April 27 Agenda Warm up • Warm up • Subtext • Inflection review • 1.5 – subtext line People have different ideas about what is considered masculine and what is considered feminine. List 5 attributes or activities that you consider masculine and 5 that you consider feminine. Do you think that your list is pretty typical, or would it anger a lot of people? Explain your answer

  2. Lists • Masculine • Feminine

  3. Listen to 1.5 and 1.6 1.5-1.6 Character of Lady Macbeth 1.5 • Lady Macbeth reads a letter from her husband telling about his promotion and saying that King Duncan will be visiting in their castle tonight. She greets him with plans of regicide. 1.6 • Lady Macbeth welcomes Duncan to Inverness

  4. Listen to 1.5 and 1.6 1.5-Character of Lady Macbeth Lines 15-31 and 44-60: Lady Macbeth’s soliloquy • How is she reacting to the news of the prophecy? How is it similar/different from Macbeth’s reactions • What does she think of her husband? From what we’ve seen, do you think she is right about him? • She talks at times about her gender—wishing to be less feminine (“unsex me here”)—why would she have this opinion? What is it about femininity you think she is rejecting and why?

  5. Subtext • What a person is thinking/feeling as he says something. • Example: “You’ve made me very happy.” • You just promoted me to a better job • You just told me I won the lottery. • You just wrecked my new car.

  6. “Oh, no you won’t” • Create 3 different subtexts for this line. What is the person thinking or feeling when he says it?

  7. Subtext in Shakespeare Text: YOUNG SIWARD: What is thy name MACBETH: Thou’lt be afraid to hear it Subtext: YOUNG SIWARD Macbeth

  8. Subtext in Shakespeare Text: YOUNG SIWARD: What is thy name MACBETH: Thou’lt be afraid to hear it Subtext: YOUNG SIWARD: This is boring. I wish I were back in Kansas with Dorothy Macbeth: I am going to scare the wits out of this little nerd

  9. Subtext in Shakespeare Text: YOUNG SIWARD: What is thy name MACBETH: Thou’lt be afraid to hear it Subtext: YOUNG SIWARD: I am scared spitless of this monster Macbeth: I am going to rip this kid apart

  10. Subtext in Shakespeare Text: YOUNG SIWARD: What is thy name MACBETH: Thou’lt be afraid to hear it Subtext: YOUNG SIWARD: I hate this killer Macbeth: What is the use of fighting any longer

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