Audience Appeal Shakespeare demonstrated the Elizabethan belief that the country is stable only if the King is good and virtuous. The play was considered.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Macbeth Background to the Play. Origin of the Play Shakespeare was talented in creative dramatization of an existing story, not creating an original story.
Advertisements

The Man That Would Be Shakespeare Born April 23 rd, 1564 Started out performing with The Lord Chamberlains Men Gave him a chance to write a play Henry.
Shakespearean Tragedy Macbeth is a tragedy. According to Aristotle, the tragic hero was a man who rose to a high position and then fell---usually to.
Macbeth “The Scottish Play” by William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare’s Tragedies They are all pretty much the same, with slight differences.
Shakespeare at pppst.com. The Man That Would Be Shakespeare Born April 23 rd, 1564 Started out performing with “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men” Gave him a.
The Man That Would Be Shakespeare Born April 23 rd, 1564 Started out performing with “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men” Gave him a chance to write a play Henry.
Historical Context of Macbeth
Macbeth: HistoricalBackground Macbeth: Historical Background.
The Tragedy of Macbeth Set in Scotland Written for King James I (formerly of Scotland, now England) Shakespeare researched The Chronicles by Raphael Holinshed.
Journal Entry: Is ambition a positive or negative trait? Can you give examples of both?
Reconstructed in the 1990’s o Aristocrats oThe Groundlings!
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth
The Man That Would Be Shakespeare Born April 23 rd, 1564 Started out performing with “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men” Gave him a chance to write a play Henry.
The Man That Would Be Shakespeare Born April 23 rd, 1564 Started out performing with “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men” Gave him a chance to write a play Henry.
The Man Who Would Be Shakespeare Born April 23 rd, 1564 “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men” Henry IV, Pt. 1-
Macbeth An introduction….
AN INTRODUCTION TO… Macbeth. Have you ever given in to temptation? Do you believe in prophecies? How do you personally decide what is good and what is.
An introduction to…. Ask yourself the following: Have you ever given in to temptation? Do you believe in prophecies? How do you personally decide what.
Essential Question: Why Then? Why Now? Objectives: –Understand why Shakespeare wrote Macbeth –Relate Macbeth to historical events/people –Formulate background.
Objective: Students will gain a better insight into the background knowledge of Shakespeare’s play Macbeth. Monday, January 26, 2015 Vocabulary Unit 8.
William Shakespeare.  Have you ever given in to temptation?  Do you believe in prophecies?  How do you personally decide what is good and what is evil?
“The Scottish Play”.  11 th century Scotland  Based on Holinshed’s History titled Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland  Shakespeare takes history.
Introduction/Historical Background. King James I of England Probably written in 1606 by special order of King James I of England/King James VI of Scotland.
Set in Scotland Written for King James I (formerly of Scotland, now England) Queen of Denmark (James’s sister) was visiting Shakespeare researched The.
Introduction to Shakespeare’s Macbeth.  Born April 23 rd, 1564  Started out performing with “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men”  Gave him a chance to write.
Warm-Up: On a separate sheet of paper or in your notebook, write a ten-word summary of Macbeth Act 1, Scene 1. I want exactly ten words – no more, no less!
The Tragedy of Macbeth by William Shakespeare
An introduction to…. Objective To understand the historical background of Macbeth To reflect on the nature of ambition as a motivating force To discover.
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
Macbeth: Historical Background
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
That Scottish Play.
This is the tragedy that is
Characteristics of a Tragedy
Macbeth.
William Shakespeare.
WITCHES TREACHERY MURDER BLOOD FAITHLESSNESS DECEPTION AMBITION.
William Shakespeare’s
INTRODUCTING MACBETH Act 1, Scenes 1 – 2
An Introduction to….
Do Now. Do Now Agenda Do Now Macbeth Notes Objective SWBAT gain an understanding of the main characters and themes of Macbeth to prepare themselves.
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth
Play that funky History…
Macbeth An introduction….
Sources of the Play Macbeth.
An introduction to….
Macbeth An introduction….
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
Slides 1 Through 21 Are needed
An introduction to….
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
An introduction to….
Introduction to Shakespeare’s
WITCHES TREACHERY MURDER BLOOD FAITHLESSNESS DECEPTION AMBITION.
Slides 1 Through 21 Are needed
Directions: Make sure to include all the notes provided including the background, characters, themes, words and definitions, etc.
Shakespeare’s Tragedies
The Tragedy of Macbeth Set in Scotland
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
Warm-Up: On a separate sheet of paper or in your notebook, write a ten-word summary of Macbeth Act 1, Scene 1. I want exactly ten words – no more, no less!
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
The Historical Context of MACBETH
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
Shakespeare’s Writing Inspiration
An introduction to….
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
To be, or not to be, that is the question...
Presentation transcript:

Audience Appeal Shakespeare demonstrated the Elizabethan belief that the country is stable only if the King is good and virtuous. The play was considered a thriller because it dramatizes a threat to an anointed King and the perceived evil behind the threat Shakespeare included a lot of blood and murder, which the Elizabethans expected to see in a tragedy. Elizabethans believed that evil occurs in darkness, which is a recurring theme in Macbeth.

Historical Background Not very accurate about the real Macbeth, king of Scotland from 1040-1057. Ruled peacefully for a long time Instead it’s directed toward the new King, James. A problem of successon: There was no Tudor successor to the throne of England after Elizabeth died. Elizabeth chose James VI of Scotland to succeed her. Why?

On her deathbed, Elizabeth wanted to ease her way into Heaven Elizabeth I had been instrumental in the death of her cousin, Mary Queen of Scots, who was beheaded The execution of rivals is the focus in the play. Nobody’s safe if that becomes a legitimate way to gain power. The pivotal role of Lady Macbeth in causing the violence links it to the Queen. On her deathbed, Elizabeth wanted to ease her way into Heaven James was Mary’s son, so it’s a way of making amends. The appointment of James I unified England and Scotland under one King. The play makes many references to this reunification under James’s ancestor, Banquo Images of Banquo’s heirs as rulers stretching on and on into the future

Shakespeare’s tribute to King James I Shakespeare wrote Macbeth in 1606, during King James’ reign. The setting is Scotland, King James’ homeland Macbeth isn’t one of the king’s ancestors, so he can’t be the good guy, in spite of his fairly long peaceful rule (1040-1057). Banquo was an ancestor of James and is shown in the play to be a virtuous person. Also invoked in the play: witchcraft James believed himself to be an expert on witchcraft, so he would have been highly entertained by its role in Macbeth.

So What Really Happens? Good guy goes bad Guy wants power Married to a woman who wants power Kills people- LOTS of people Gets power Gets paranoid anyone could do the same to him, and some want to Loses allies/friends Wants more power! Kill! Kill! Gets what’s coming to him in the end

The Tragic Hero Def. “Man of high standard who falls from that high because of a flaw that has affected many” - Aristotle Macbeth is one of the most famous examples of the tragic hero.

Don’t we all have a kind of hubris? (that will exact a price?)

Discussion: Chart the structure in Macbeth Exposition (establishing the situation) Inciting force (first moment of conflict) Errors of Judgement (resulting from his flaw) Crisis (turning point after which the character is controlled by events instead of the other way around) Tragic Force (making it worse because of his tragic flaw) Moment of Suspense (last possibility of escape) Catastrophe Glimpse of restored order