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1/5/12 Please complete the Romeo and Juliet Anticipation guide on your desk. Once completed, you will meet with a partner to discuss.

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1/5/12. Please complete the Romeo and Juliet Anticipation guide on your desk. Once completed, you will meet with a partner to discuss. . William Shakespeare. Widely regarded as the greatest writer in English Literature. Understanding Shakespeare and Elizabethan Drama. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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1/5/12

Please complete the Romeo and Juliet Anticipation guide on your desk. Once

completed, you will meet with a partner to discuss.

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William ShakespeareWidely regarded as the greatest writer in English

Literature

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Understanding Shakespeare and

Elizabethan DramaTurn to page 574 in your books!

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Born on April 23, 1564. Lived in Stratford-upon-Avon. Educated at King’s New School in Stratford. Married Anne Hathaway at the age of 18, she

was 26 years old and pregnant with their first child.

They had a total of three children. Susanna-oldest, and twins: Hamnet and Judith

Shakespeare’s Life

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Hamnet died at the age of eleven from

unknown causes. Shakespeare divided his time between London

and Stratford-upon-Avon throughout his career.

Died on April 23, 1616 which is his birthday!

Shakespeare’s Life

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Started out as an actor Wrote 37 Plays About 154 sonnets Most were produced between 1590 and 1613 Some believe that the works attributed to him

are not actually his!

His Accomplishments

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About 150 years after Shakespeare died

people began to doubt that he had actually written his plays.

Some believe that others such as Francis Bacon, Christopher Marlowe, and Edward de Vere are actually the authors.

In academic circles this theory, known as the Oxfordian Theory, is generally rejected.

Did he Plagiarize?

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Built in 1599 Constructed out of wood used in the

construction of an earlier theatre called The Theatre.

The owner of The Theatre, James Burbage, Richard Burbage’s father, had a 21 year lease on the property The Theatre sat on.

When the lease ran out the owner of the property claimed to own the building.

The Globe

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While the owner of the land was celebrating

Christmas, a carpenter and the actors dismantled The Theatre and carried it piece by piece to a warehouse.

When the weather warmed they ferried the materials across the Thames and built The Globe.

Seating was arranged by class: Wealthy got benches “Groundlings”-poorer people watched from the “pit” All but the wealthy would have been uneducated

The Globe

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The Globe was roofless There was only natural light, therefore, shows were

performed in the afternoons. Audience would have interacted with the play. NO Scenery! On June 29, 1613, The Globe burned during a performance of

Henry the Eighth. A canon used during the play misfired and caught the

structure on fire. Rebuilt by 1614 Closed by the Puritans in 1642 Torn down to make room for tenements in 1644.

The Globe

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Only men and boys acted in the plays. Young boys whose voices had not changed

play women’s roles. It would have been considered inappropriate

for a woman to appear on stage.

The Actors

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An, and – If Anon – Soon Aye – Yes But – Except for E’en – Even E’er – Ever Haply – Perhaps Happy – Fortunate Hence – Away, from her

Elizabethan Words - Modern English

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Hie – Hurry Marry – Indeed Whence – Where Wilt – Will, Will you Withal – In addition to Would - Wish

Elizabethan Words – Modern English

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Romeo and Juliet Family Shields

Assignment & competition. Then we will take the Of Mice and Men test!

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You will be creating a family shield Put an actual picture of yourself in the upper

left corner; a quote that represents you in the upper right

corner; five things you enjoy in the bottom left corner; and a ‘C' or an ‘M' in the bottom right hand

corner for Capulet or Montague (this will be randomly chosen!)

Directions

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Each family chooses colors. The upper right

and lower left corner are one color; the upper left and lower right are another color.

Get together with your family, decide quickly on two colors. Come back and color your shield.

When you have your family…

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Capulet’s Montague’s BANISHED

Three areas:

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Students who earn a zero on an assignment are BANISHED immediately. Once a family accumulates -5 points, a family member is banished.

Negative points accumulate as a result of missed assignments, poor grades, bad behavior, or any other arbitrary thing that bugs me, the teacher.

Once a family accumulates +5 points, a banished member is brought back. Positive points accumulate as a result of high test scores, general helpfulness, or good behavior.

Families can either vote on who to banish or family members can volunteer to be banished or the teacher can choose who is banished. As far as the contest is concerned, banished members still contribute positive and negative points to the team and suffer no individual negative grade consequences.

At the end of the play, the team with the least amount of family members banished gets a reward.

Competition amongst families…

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Grab a seat with your family!

**Capulet’s by the door; Montague’s by my desk! Sit ONLY where a paper is!

**We have reading roles to sign up for! Remember, positive points for your family!

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Think of a few times when an adult make demands that you

considered difficult. What happened? How did you

respond?

Journal