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How to Read and Understand Shakespeare

Season 1
Shakespeare's plays are masterworks, but they can be hard to understand for a modern English speaker. Gain direct insight into Shakespeare's writing in this course which explains how to enter Shakespeare's world, how to grasp what's happening in his plays, and how to enjoy each play on both the page and the stage.
IMDb 5.7201324 episodes7+
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Episodes

  1. S1 E1 - Approaching Shakespeare-The Scene Begins
    May 9, 2013
    32min
    TV-PG
    Consider four points of entry for understanding what's happening in a Shakespeare play. Learn how to approach a single dramatic scene, focusing on Shakespeare's richly metaphorical use of language. Begin to grasp the playwright's use of stagecraft, and how his plays require your own active participation and powers of imagination.#Literature & Learning 
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  2. S1 E2 - Shakespeare's Theater and Stagecraft
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    Here, envision theatrical London as it existed in Shakespeare's time. First, consider Shakespeare's fundamental intent to "hold the mirror up to nature"--to imitate the living world. Then learn about the colorful milieu of Elizabethan theater; its conventions of physical space, scenery, and costumes; and how the playwright created theatrical "reality" through language.
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  3. S1 E3 - A Midsummer Night's Dream-Comic Tools
    March 8, 2013
    34min
    TV-PG
    In his comedic plays, Shakespeare drew on the classical Roman model of comedy. In A Midsummer Night's Dream, see how he expands the form, using the archetypal plot devices of "blocked love," its resolution at either the altar or the grave, and the escape from urban life to the magical world of the forest.
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  4. S1 E4 - A Midsummer Night's Dream-Comic Structure
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    This lecture explores key principles for understanding and appreciating Shakespeare's comedies. Grasp the thematic elements of a shift from friendship to romantic love and of severe testing of the characters. See how the three-part structure of the comedies leads inevitably to reconciliation and regeneration.
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  5. S1 E5 - Romeo and Juliet-Words, Words, Words
    March 8, 2013
    32min
    TV-PG
    Shakespeare's primary tool as a playwright is words themselves as dramatic expressions of character and meaning. In Romeo and Juliet, see how Shakespeare ingeniously uses language to distinguish class and personality, and how he uses the poetic form of the sonnet in creating a sublime language of love.
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  6. S1 E6 - Romeo and Juliet-The Tools of Tragedy
    March 8, 2013
    31min
    TV-PG
    Continuing with Romeo and Juliet, observe how the famous balcony scene shifts the action and sense of the play toward a new kind of character-driven tragedy. In the play's unfolding, note the role of the tension between fate and free will, and the arc of development whereby Juliet becomes a great tragic figure.
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  7. S1 E7 - Appearance versus Reality in Twelfth Night
    March 8, 2013
    32min
    TV-PG
    As one of his outstanding "mature" comedies, Twelfth Night reveals themes and elements that are keys to all of Shakespeare's plays. Discover how the comedy revolves around crises of identity, the need to distinguish external appearance from internal reality, and a reversal of power roles
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  8. S1 E8 - Twelfth Night-More Comic Tools
    March 8, 2013
    31min
    TV-PG
    In Shakespeare's encompassing vision of Twelfth Night, observe how the young characters' movement toward self-knowledge and mutual love contrasts with plot elements of isolation and rejection. See how the remarkable heroine Viola, a figure of grace, acts as an agent of redemption for the entire world of the play.
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  9. S1 E9 - Richard II-History and Kingship
    March 8, 2013
    33min
    TV-PG
    In his history plays, Shakespeare addresses profound issues of politics, philosophy, and religion. In Richard II, engage with core thematic elements that drive the history plays: the question of the "divine right" of kingship, the larger meanings of historical events, and the conflict between brothers--an emblem for civil war
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  10. S1 E10 - Politics as Theater in Henry IV, Part I
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    Here, the dynamic of appearance versus reality illuminates the making of a king. In the dual world of the Court and the Tavern, witness Shakespeare's use of theatrical role-playing to reveal Prince Hal and Falstaff to themselves, and grasp how Hal's journey to kingship takes on the nature of a calculated "performance."
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  11. S1 E11 - Henry IV, Part 2-Contrast and Complexity
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    As an interpretive tool, define Part 2's stark differences with the preceding play, noting its shifting depictions of courage and honor, and its characters' reversals of fortune. Follow Prince Hal's dramatic metamorphosis as he assumes the throne, disavowing the dissolute life he lived and embracing the course of justice and order.
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  12. S1 E12 - The Drama of Ideas in Henry V
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    In plumbing the riches of one of Shakespeare's greatest history plays, assess Henry's ambiguous relation to God as he manipulates faith and religion to his political ends. Grasp also how Henry employs the dynamics of theater, brilliantly "staging" each of his critical actions, and how he defeats the expectations of his French foes.
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  13. S1 E13 - Macbeth: Foul and Fair
    March 8, 2013
    32min
    TV-PG
    In Macbeth, Shakespeare reveals a world in which everything becomes its opposite. Study how reversals of reality and meaning dominate the play, seen vividly in the recurring dynamic of betrayal and the politically charged tension between appearance and reality. See how the playwright uses "comic relief" to ultimately heighten the horror you've witnessed
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  14. S1 E14 - The Tragic Woman in Macbeth
    March 8, 2013
    29min
    TV-PG
    Shakespeare's great tragic women are central to the functioning of his tragedies. Here, encounter the powerful figure of Lady Macbeth and observe how her arc of development as a character inversely mirrors her husband's. Grasp how Macbeth poignantly sounds the depths of meaninglessness as he confronts the abyss of his own making.
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  15. S1 E15 - Staging Hamlet
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    Discover how Hamlet's opening scene reveals many of the crucial themes of the play. Then delve into the use of acting as a major dynamic of the story, as Hamlet ultimately takes action through the devices of theater, staging a play to determine the course of his own fate.
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  16. S1 E16 - The Religious Drama of Hamlet
    March 8, 2013
    31min
    TV-PG
    A deep look at the religious and theological issues at work in Hamlet unlocks the meanings in Shakespeare's most celebrated play. Study three important moments of religious contemplation within the play, and see how Hamlet's hesitance to avenge his father's murder is enmeshed with his foreboding sense of the afterlife.
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  17. S1 E17 - The Women of Hamlet
    March 8, 2013
    31min
    TV-PG
    Two crucial women illuminate the core themes and dynamics of Hamlet. Grasp how Gertrude, who speaks only in moderation, compellingly underlines the issues of loyalty and betrayal that drive the story, and how Ophelia, torn between irreconcilable male figures, becomes a sacrifice to the tragic forces of the play.
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  18. S1 E18 - The Merchant of Venice-Comedy or Tragedy?
    March 8, 2013
    29min
    TV-PG
    In this extraordinary play, Shakespeare explores the dark undercurrents of comedy to the fullest. Delve into the crisis of identity that each character faces, the theme of perilous risk, and the plot elements of loss and sacrifice that work against the play's comic structure.
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  19. S1 E19 - The Arc of Character in The Merchant of Venice
    March 8, 2013
    31min
    TV-PG
    Begin this lecture by tracing the historical background of Judaism in Elizabethan London, and how the portrayal of Shylock conforms to contemporary conventions of comic villains. Then see how Shakespeare breaks free of the stereotypes of his time, developing the character and the play as a penetrating meditation on justice and mercy.
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  20. S1 E20 - Measure for Measure-Is This Comedy?
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    With Measure for Measure, you enter the world of Shakespeare's "problem plays"--dramas that seem neither truly comic nor tragic. Here, observe how Shakespeare creates Vienna, the play's setting, as a place of hypocrisy, deception, and trickery, where nothing is what it seems and all the tenets of comedy are subverted.
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  21. S1 E21 - Measure for Measure-Overcoming Tragedy
    March 8, 2013
    31min
    TV-PG
    This lecture uses the interpretive tools of both comedy and tragedy to mine the deeper meanings of Measure for Measure. Study how the playwright treats plot elements and character relationships that show the hallmarks of tragedy, finally overturning them in a surprising and transformative resolution of the story
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  22. S1 E22 - Tools of Romance in The Tempest
    March 8, 2013
    32min
    TV-PG
    At the end of his career, Shakespeare developed the form of drama known as his Late Romances. Here, learn how The Tempest exemplifies the three-part structure of the Romances, as the magical figure Prospero "stages" a series of trials for the shipwrecked characters, leading them through suffering to ultimate reconciliation.
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  23. S1 E23 - The Tempest-Shakespeare's Farewell to Art
    March 8, 2013
    30min
    TV-PG
    Begin this lecture by investigating the spiritual significance of The Tempest's island setting as a testing ground for humanity's nobler nature. Then grasp how Shakespeare seems to speak directly to us through the figure of Prospero, whose final renunciation of his magical art mirrors Shakespeare's own farewell to playwriting.
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  24. S1 E24 - The Tools for a Lifetime of Shakespeare
    March 8, 2013
    32min
    TV-PG
    The many interpretive tools you've studied leave you with the ability to engage meaningfully with any Shakespeare play. In concluding, look at three plays you have not yet studied in detail--Much Ado About Nothing, Julius Caesar, and As You Like It--and see how the tools allow you to directly appreciate their structures, devices, and deeper meanings.
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Details

More info

Audio languages
English
Subtitles
English [CC]
Producers
The Great Courses
Cast
Marc C. Conner
Studio
The Great Courses
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