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Murder, Revenge, Love, and Hamlet

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Presentation on theme: "Murder, Revenge, Love, and Hamlet"— Presentation transcript:

1 Murder, Revenge, Love, and Hamlet
Return to Shakespeare Murder, Revenge, Love, and Hamlet

2 Review Poetry Terms Blank Verse Free Verse Heroic Couplet Monometer
Scansion Elision Voiced Syllable Shared Line Iamb Trochee Dactyl Spondee Anapest Quatrain Blank Verse Free Verse Heroic Couplet Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Rhyme Ellipsis

3 Hamlet William Shakespeare

4 Objectives Read, understand and analyze Shakespearean poetry/tragedy
Identify a tragic hero and support with textual analysis Identify and analyze poetic elements as they affect the telling of a story, development of a character or emerging of a theme Analyze a theme as it carries throughout an entire work using textual support

5 The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
Published in 1604 The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark

6 Just Imagine… Your father has just died Your mother marries your uncle
You’re visited by the ghost of your dead father who tells you he was murdered by your new dad You have a girlfriend who is mentally unstable You have an unhealthy infatuation with your own mother

7 Setting Late medieval period in Denmark
Hamlet feels the pressure to avenge his father’s death His father’s ghost visits him and reveals that Hamlet’s uncle Claudius has murdered him in order to become king Hamlet struggles with trusting the ghost

8 Major Characters Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
Claudius, King of Denmark, Hamlet’s Uncle Gertrude, Queen of Denmark, Hamlet’s Mother Polonius, Lord Chamberlain of Claudius’ court Horatio, Hamlet’s friend Ophelia, Polonius’s daughter, Hamlet’s love Laertes, Polonius’s son Fortinbras, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern

9 Ambiguity There are many ambiguities in Hamlet, the audience is left with uncertainty about several things Gertrude’s guilt Hamlet’s love for Ophelia Is Hamlet’s revenge morally justified? and more… Shakespeare may have intended for these ambiguities to enhance the theme of uncertainty

10 Film Adaptations 1948 – British film directed by and starred Laurence Olivier (Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Actor) 1964 – Russian adaptation, most soliloquies cut out – Hamlet is delayed not by inner conflict but instead by circumstances 1969 – First color film directed by Tony Richardson; made with a small budget and minimal set; marketed to teenage audiences as a tragic love story (hoping to gain success after the 1968 Zeffirelli version of Romeo and Juliet)

11 Film Adaptations 1990 –directed by Zeffirelli (same guy who did R & J), starred Mel Gibson, Glenn Close, and Helena Bonham Carter; fits into the “action” genre; highlights the sexual nature of the relationship between Hamlet and his mother directed by and starred Kenneth Branagh Full text (runs about 4 hours); also features Billy Crystal, Robin Williams, and Kate Winslet; vibrant colors, extensive Victorian costumes and furnishings 2000 – Starring Ethan Hawke, Hamlet is a film student and the “kingdom” is the Denmark Corporation and instead of becoming King, Hamlet’s uncle becomes CEO; ghost appears on closed circuit television; also stars Julia Stiles, Liev Schreiber, and Bill Murray

12 Reading Act I Act I – Scene I Act I – Scene II Barnardo
We will read in class on Tuesday. Acts I and II should be read, in full, by Monday, November 30th . Act I – Scene I Barnardo Francisco Horatio Marcellus Act I – Scene II King (Claudius) Queen (Gertrude) Cornelius/Voltemand Laertes Polonius Hamlet Horatio Marcellus Assign parts for reading on Monday. Encourage students to read Act I over the weekend, it should be read completely by Tuesday.

13 Reading Deadlines Act I by Tuesday, November 24th
Act II by Monday, November 30th Act III by Friday, December 4th Act IV by Tuesday, December 8th Act V by Friday, December 11th


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