Oakland University
English Department

Course Information


English 105--Shakespeare
  • Fall 2001
  • M 6:30-9:50; 102 WH

  • Brian A. Connery, x2267
  • 517 WH
  • M 5:00-5:45; W 3:00-4:00; Th 4:00-4:30; and by appointment.
  • Email me!
  • Connery's home page

    "Nothing can please many, and please long, but just representations of general nature. . . . Shakespeare is above all writers, at least above all modern writers, the poet of nature; the poet that holds up to his readers a faithful mirrour of manners and of life. . . . Shakespeare's plays are not in the rigorous and critical sense either tragedies or comedies, but compositions of a distinct kind; exhibiting the real state of sublunary nature, which partakes of good and evil, joy and sorrow, mingled with endless variety of proportion and innumerable modes of combination; and expressing the course of the world, in which the loss of one is the gain of another; in which, at the same time, the reveler is hasting to his wine, and the mourner burying his friend; in which the malignity of one is sometimes defeated by the frolick of another; and many mischiefs and many benefits are done and hindered without design." Samuel Johnson, 1765

    Course description: This is first and foremost a course in reading: developing the skills requisite to meet the challenges of reading--with comprehension, appreciation, and pleasure--highly artificial work written by a genius in antique English. In order to achieve this comprehension, we’ll look at the language itself, the figures of speech, themes, and the literary conventions and cultural context of the works. We’ll attend both to the ways in which Shakespeare is our contemporary as an early modern and the ways in which his work and culture are utterly alien. In particular, we’ll discuss the ways in which Shakespeare experiments with the genres of comedy, tragedy, and romance, and the innovative techniques he uses in order to produce subjectivities susceptible to modern analysis. Readings of seven plays (three comedies, two tragedies, a history, and a romance) will be supplemented with screenings of a variety of productions. Discussion and informal lecture format. Regular attendance and timely completion of assignments essential. Students will keep reading journals and a commonplace book, respond to study questions, participate in an email discussion list between class meetings, take quizzes, and complete midterm and final examinations. THIS COURSE SATISFIES THE FOUR-HOUR DISTRIBUTION REQUIREMENT IN LITERATURE.

    Texts: Shakespeare, Richard III (Folger); The Comedy of Errors (Folger); Much Ado About Nothing (Folger); Othello (Signet); Measure for Measure (Signet); King Lear (Signet); The Winter’s Tale (Signet).

    Policies: Faithful attendance and regular participation in class are expected. To provide motivation when it is lacking, unannounced quizzes may be given. Quizzes cannot be made up without prior permission or documentation of a legitimate excuse for absence. No quiz grades will be dropped. Students with special needs are welcome to discuss them with me. Some services for students with special needs are available through the Office of Disability Support Services, 157 NFH, x3266. No alternative examination dates will be available. The grade of Incomplete is available only to students who have demonstrated regular and steady progress in the course but for whom unforeseeable and uncontrollable circumstances make impossible the timely completion of the course. Students suspected of academic dishonesty will be reported to the Dean of Students for consideration of the Academic Conduct Committee of the University Senate. Cheating on any course assignment may result in failure for the course and suspension or expulsion from the University. Representing anybody else's work as your own is a form of academic dishonesty. For further information, please see the section on "Academic Conduct" in the undergraduate catalogue.

    Classroom Decorum: Everyone in the class is responsible for ensuring that the classroom supports learning: Please arrive on time; try not to distract others; turn off your cell phone; address your comments to the class at large. You are encouraged to participate vigorously, even passionately, in class discussion, but always respectfully to your classmates and your instructor. Please plan to remain in class for the entire meeting each night.

    Major Assignments:

    The following simple formula will determine your final grade for the course:

  • Quiz average 10%
  • Journal average 20%
  • Commonplace book average 10%
  • Mid-term exam 25%
  • Participation 10%
  • Final exam 25%
  • Extra credit assignments are also available.

    Some links of interest:

  • Visit the University of Reading's Globe Theatre Research Site.

  • Study Guides for each play are available from Spark Notes. These won't substitute for actually READING the plays, but they may be helpful.

  • Historical, cultural, and biographical information, along with plot synopses, is available at The Shakespeare Resource Center.

  • During the month of September, the Encyclopedia Brittanica Online offers an exceptionally good site: Shakespeare and the Globe, Then and Now
  • For fun, visit the Elizabethan Curse Generator

    Schedule: Unless we get very tired very fast, we will adhere to the following schedule. If a class meeting is canceled for any reason please continue reading according to the schedule.

    September

    10 Orientation; Matters Logistical; Who/what was/is Shakespeare? Practice in reading; screening of Pacino's Looking for Richard.

    Below: David Garrick as Richard III by Francis Hayman, 1760; David Garrick as Richard III, by William Hogarth.

    17 Subscribe to email discussion list: Send email, without subject line or signature, to majordomo@oakland.edu, with the message, Subscribe britlit370-L followed by your email address.

  • Read “Shakespeare’s Richard III” (xiii-xiv), “Reading Shakespeare’s Language: Richard III (xv-xxv), and Richard III. You may want to consult the geneological chart on pp. 2-3. Material on the War of the Roses is available at The War of the Roses; For the backstory for R3, you might visit The Wars of the Roses home page or the very brief synopsis at the Richard III Society website.

    24 Read “The Publication of Shakespeare’s Plays” (xliii-xlvii), “An Introduction to this Text” (xlviii-lix), and Phyllis Rackin’s “Richard III: A Modern Perspective” (337-349) in R3.

  • Read “Shakespeare’s Life” (xxv-xxxvi) and “Shakespeare’s Theater” (xxxvi-xlv) in CE.
  • Read Comedy of Errors, Act 1.

    October

    1 Read Comedy of Errors, Acts 2-5 and Arthur F. Kinney’s “The Comedy of Errors: A Modern Perspective” (179-195).

  • Read “A Note on the Anti-Stratfordians . . .” in Measure for Measure (xi-xv). For a more extensive statement of the Anti-Stratfordian case, see The Shakespeare Oxford Society Page; for the rebuttal, see The Shakespeare Authorship Page
  • *Journal and commonplace book will be collected.

    8 Read Much Ado About Nothing, Acts 1-5.

    15Read Gail Kern Paster’s “Much Ado about Nothing: A Modern Perspective” in Much Ado (213-230).

  • Read “The Play Text as a Collaboration,” “Editing Texts,” and “Shakespeare on the Stage” in Measure for Measure (xliii-lxi)

    Below: Claudio, Deceived by Don John, Accuses Hero by Marcus Stone

    22 Read Measure for Measure, Acts 1-5

  • *Journal and commonplace book will be collected.

    29 Read S. Nagurajan’s “Introduction” to Measure for Measure, lxiii-lxiv,

  • Read Marcia Riefer Poulsen’s “‘Instruments of Some More Mightier Member’: The Construction of Female Power in Measure for Measure,” in Signet, 153-172 Read Ruth Nevo’s “Complex Sexuality,” in Signet, 173-179

    November

    5 Midterm Examination. Bring a blue examination booklet to class.

    12 Read Othello, Acts 1-5

    Below: Othello Relating His Adventures by Charles W. Cope, 1853















    19 Read Alvin Kernan's "Introduction" to Othello, Signet lxiii-lxxiv; Cinthio, Selection from Hecatommithi, in Signet Othello, 134-146; Barnet, "Othello on Stage and Screen," Signet Othello, 217-231

    26 Read King Lear, Acts 1-5. For fun (or comic relief), see Richard Nathan's parody of King Lear, "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth"

    December

    3 Read A.C. Bradley, from Shakespearean Tragedy, in KL 190-207; Read Harley Granville-Barker, from Prefaces to Shakespeare, in KL 208-224; Read Maynard Mack, from “King Lear in Our Time," in KL 225-234; Read Winter’s Tale, Acts 1-3.

    12 The Winter's Tale--complete play. Journals and commonplace books will be collected.

    19 Frank Kermode's "Introduction to Winter's Tale, Signet lxiii-lxxvii Tillyard's selection from Shakespeare's Last Plays, in the Signet WT 149-157 Knight's selection from The Crown of Life, in the Signet WT 159-170 Carol Thomas Neely, "The Winter's Tale: Women and Issue," Signet WT 171-183

    Below: John Fawcett as Autolycus in "The Winter's Tale" by Thomas Charles Wageman, 1828

    26 7:00-10:00 p.m. Final examination. Bring a blue examination booklet.

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