ENGL 4165:

SHAKESPEARE I

Mr. Radcliffe drad@vt.edu
Office Hours: MW 2-3:00 412 Shanks Hall



Syllabus

In this course we will consider Shakespeare's early career as a playwright and his after-career as literary icon. Both involved history and fanstasy: the history plays contain much fiction and the comedies not a little history, while Shakespeare's reception, quite as much as the plays, was colored by the imaginative imperatives of the hour. If Shakespeare's characters come across as larger-than-life, so does the Bard himself. The plays and criticism alike involve rhetorical display, leading us to pay particular attention to wordplay and audiences.

The lectures will develop two threads useful for understanding Shakespeare, and literature generally. The first is the concept of genre. The plays are not snapshots of Elizabethan life and manners, but works of art in which characters and stories are shaped according to elaborate sets of rules that Shakespeare would follow or subvert as he saw fit. Characters in comedies behave differently than characters in tragedies not simply because of their personalities, but because they appear in different kinds of story.

The second thread has to do with the history of literary criticism. For us, Shakespeare is a cultural icon. This was not the case when the plays were written of course. We'll do a brief survey of some classic works of literary criticism to indicate how Shakespeare came to be what he is today by looking at what he was for seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth-century readers.

Course requirements consist of class participation (20%), a mid-term examination (20%), a 15 pp. research paper (40%) and a final examination (20%). Participation involves regular attendance, joining in discussion, and responses to occasional email assignments. Students are expected to abide by Virginia Tech's Honor Code: all writing done for this class must be your own or clearly sourced. Since this course is based in lecture and discussion, frequent and protracted absences will be penalized.

Texts: You'll need a good college Shakespeare: one with a modern text (that is to say, one that hasn't been modernized!) good annotations and glossaries, and helpful prefatory material. I have ordered the Norton Shakespeare, but Riverside, Pelican, and Oxford will do. What will not do is a cheap facsimile reprint from Books-R-Us, or your family's heirloom Shakespeare. You want one with all the naughty words intact and glossed. Digital texts of the criticism are supplied. It is important that you bring these to class for discussion; print a copy if necessary.

The research paper can be on a wide variety of topics related to Shakespeare and Shakespeare criticsm. It should focus on a particular topic and report on what several writers have had to say about the subject as well as providing your own original insights. Narrow and seemingly arcane topics often work best; they are more fun to research and you'll be amazed at the depth of criticism there is to work with. Discuss the topic with me ahead of time.

Office Hours: Mondays and Wednesdays at 2:00, and by appointment. Come by to chat about literature, your essays, future plans, whatever.

Schedule

21 August: Introduction
23 August: Richard II

28 August: Richard II
30 August: Richard II

4 September: Henry IV Part I
6 September: Henry IV Part I

11 September: Henry IV Part II
13 September: Henry IV Part II

18 September: Henry IV Part II
20 September: Basse, Jonson, Milton on Shakespeare

25 September: Henry V
27 September: Henry V

2 October: Henry V
4 October: Rowe and Pope on Shakespeare

9 October: Merry Wives of Windsor
11 October: Merry Wives of Windsor [take-home Mid-term examination due]

16 October: Merry Wives of Windsor
18 October: Samuel Johnson on Shakespeare

23 October: Romeo and Juliet
25 October: Romeo and Juliet

30 October: Romeo and Juliet
1 November: Coleridge and Hazlitt on Shakespeare

6 November: Merchant of Venice
8 November: Merchant of Venice

13 November: Merchant of Venice
15 November: As You Like It

Thanksgiving Break 17-25 November

27 November: As You Like It [research paper due]
29 November: As You Like It

4 December: Jameson on Shakespeare

Final Examination Wednesday 10 December 7:45 AM