who was william shakespeare?

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Who was William Shakespeare?. ?. Family. John Shakespeare & Mary Arden. Joan (1558). Edmund (?). Gilbert (1566). #5 Female (?). #6 Female (?). William (1564). Richard (1574). #7 Female (?). Spelling not yet standardized, thus name spelled in different ways: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Who was William Shakespeare?

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Page 2: Who was William Shakespeare?
Page 3: Who was William Shakespeare?
Page 4: Who was William Shakespeare?

John Shakespeare & Mary Arden

Joan (1558)

Gilbert (1566)

Richard (1574)

Edmund (?)

William (1564)

#5 Female (?)

#6 Female (?)

#7 Female (?)

•Spelling not yet standardized, thus name spelled in different ways:•Shakespeare, Shakspere, Shackspere, Shaxper, Shagspere, Shaxberd, etc.

Page 5: Who was William Shakespeare?

From: http://www.where-can-i-find.com/tourist-maps.html

Page 6: Who was William Shakespeare?

As reproduced in William Rolfe, Shakespeare the Boy (1896).

Page 7: Who was William Shakespeare?

From Stratford’s web site: http://www.stratford-upon-avon.co.uk/index.htm

Page 8: Who was William Shakespeare?

From: http://perso.wanadoo.fr/danielle.esposito/

Page 9: Who was William Shakespeare?

• Likely attended King’s New School in Stratford

• Educated in:• Rhetoric• Logic• History• Latin & Greek

• Probably a class of 12 boys

• Left school at age 15 to begin work

King’s New SchoolKing’s New School

From: http://perso.wanadoo.fr/danielle.esposito/

Page 10: Who was William Shakespeare?

• Married in November, 1582, to Anne Hathaway

• He was 18, she was 26 (1)

• Anne was pregnant at the time

• First daughter Susanna born in May, 1583

• Twins (Hamnet and Judith) christened on

February 2, 1585

Page 11: Who was William Shakespeare?

From: http://perso.wanadoo.fr/danielle.esposito/

Page 12: Who was William Shakespeare?

People loved their sweets! Some people’s teeth turned black and some

artificially blackened their teeth to show they had their fill of sugar.

For women, pale skin was a sign of “supreme loveliness”, so they bleached their skin with products “mildly toxic.” Even Queen Elizabeth did this!

Beverage consumed copiously: beerEating method: your own (dirty) hands

Page 13: Who was William Shakespeare?

• Speculations:• Money lender• Gardener• Sailor• Scrivener

• Tutor• Coachman• Soldier• Schoolmaster• Lawyer• Clerk

Page 14: Who was William Shakespeare?

• Shows up in records from 1592• Another playwright talks about “an upstart young crow”• 1589-1594 include his first plays, first hits:• Henry IV • Titus Adronicus• Comedy of Errors

Page 15: Who was William Shakespeare?

• Plague outbreaks close theaters, giving WS time to write poetry

• 154 Sonnets in his lifetime • Addressed to a young man and a dark lady• Written in iambic pentameter

• Poetry usually dedicated to a patron who acted as a “sponsor” of a writer or artist

Page 16: Who was William Shakespeare?

• 1594 acting company is Lord Chamberlain’s Men• WS is a full member, writing and acting

• Having achieved commercial success, WS applies for a coat of arms in 1596• A status symbol, mark of a gentleman,

something his own father was denied• This is the same year (August) his son and

male heir Hamnet dies (causes unknown) @ 11 yoa

• 1597 WS buys a new home in Stratford, “New Place,” and visits his family

Page 17: Who was William Shakespeare?

10-20 members; 3-5 boys for female rolesActors specialized in roles (e.g., dramatic

leads, clowns, comic leads, etc.)Needed a patron or sponsorRepertory—plays change daily (lead actor

could have 800 lines/week)Plays belonged to company not

playwrightShakespeare did not publish plays for this

reason

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• Tickets cost from 1 penny to 6 pence• Behavior was “rowdy” with audience shouting at actors, throwing things, even spilling onto stage• Vendors selling food, drink• No restrooms and no intermissions

Page 21: Who was William Shakespeare?

• Performed every day but Sunday between 2 and 5 for natural light

• Theaters could not advertise, but did have a trumpet fanfare and raised a flag on the theater

• Actors had elaborate costumes• Not much for scenery or background, so

writers had to describe and audience had to imagine

• Musicians provided sounds for special effects• Stage structure

Page 22: Who was William Shakespeare?

• 1610-1611—retires to Stratford• 1613 Collaborates with John Fletcher• Dies in April 1616 (unknown causes)• Will leaves “second best bed” to his wife (??) (1)• 1623 fellow actors publish the First Folio of his

plays• Shakespeare Conspiracy---because he never

published his plays, some believe he is not the true author---however most believe in his authorship.

Page 23: Who was William Shakespeare?
Page 24: Who was William Shakespeare?

• 38 plays firmly attributed to Shakespeare (1)

• 14 comedies• 10 histories• 10 tragedies• 4 romancesSpeculated Plays

• Possibly wrote three others:• Edward III• Love’s Labour’s Won• Cardenio (lost)

• Collaborated on several others• Sir Thomas More

Page 25: Who was William Shakespeare?

•Shakespeare did NOT write in “Old English”

•Old English is the language of Beowulf:Hwaet! We Gardena in geardagum Þeodcyninga Þrym gefrunonHu ða æÞelingas ellen fremedon!

Hey! We have heard of the glory of the Spear-Danes in the old days, the kings of tribes, how noble princes showed great courage!

Page 26: Who was William Shakespeare?

•Shakespeare did not write in “Middle English”

•Middle English is the language of Chaucer, the Gawain-poet, and Malory:

We redeth oft and findeth y-write—And this clerkes wele it wite—Layes that ben in harpingBen y-founde of ferli thing… (Sir Orfeo)

Page 27: Who was William Shakespeare?

•Shakespeare wrote in “Early Modern English”

•EME was not very different from “Modern English,” except that it had some old holdovers, and the “Inkhorn Controversy” was still an issue.

•Beginning about 200 years before Shakespeare, and largely complete by his day, long vowel pronunciation shifted: ex: good, name, life

Page 28: Who was William Shakespeare?

•We kept: addiction, compulsive, pious, tranquil, crew, landscape, nautical, etc.

•But lost: kexy (dry, brittle), pigritude (laziness), and the longest word ever used in English literature, honorificabilitudinitatibus (being able to receive honors)

Page 29: Who was William Shakespeare?

•Shakespeare coined many words we still use today:

•Critical•Majestic•Dwindle

And quite a few phrases as well:•One fell swoop•Flesh and blood•Vanish into thin air

See http://www.wordorigins.org/histeng.htm

Page 30: Who was William Shakespeare?
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• Shakespeare’s sonnets and plays addressed things to which everyone could relate:• Ambition, intrigue, love, suffering, anger,

greed, passion, self-destruction, compassion…

• Shakespeare had the ability to show the workings of the soul.

Page 32: Who was William Shakespeare?

• Do not pause at the end of a line unless the punctuation calls for it

• Read it like prose• Many of these plays have numerous

references to people, places, events, myths, etc., that you might not be familiar with. That’s what the notes are for—use them.

• Keep a dictionary handy—preferably a good college edition

• You might need a mythology reference