Richard II: From Ceremony to Farce. What happens to Richard in the radically changing universe of the play where old Chain of Being values no longer apply?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Tragedy of King Richard II Day Two ENGL 305 Dr. Fike.
Advertisements

Richard II: Engendering Show. Conclusion of Last Class: the second gage scene represents the structure of the first but brings out the element of show.
Phenomenology of Reading Georges Poulet
Early modern public theaters were located outside of the city limits (across the Thames River) with the bear baiting and the brothels in what was called.
STUDY GUIDE for SHAKESPEARE’S RICHARD II. PART THE FIRST EDWARD III.
(Def): a strong belief that something will happen or be the case in the future.
Richard II: The Test of Identity. Recapping of Last Class: Or, Siting/Sighting Richard II A characterization of the High Renaissance sensibility: an at.
Richard II – second lecture Ideologies of kingship in the late 16 th century.
Early modern public theaters were located outside of the city limits (across the Thames River) with the bear baiting and the brothels in what was called.
Richard II: From Ceremony to Farce. What happens to Richard in the radically changing universe of the play where old Chain of Being values no longer apply?
The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare.
Welcome Teachers Here is a quick overview of Shakespeare ’ s life - in game format - found at “ Mr. William Shakespeare and the Internet ” and some pictures.
Richard II and The Order of Things. First Order of Business : Taming Test How would you rate the difficulty level of the Taming scantron test? A) Very.
Elements of Drama.
Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564 Born in Stratford upon AvonBorn in Stratford upon Avon Died on April 23,
William Shakespeare. Shakespeare Born in 1563 Stratford, England wrote 37 plays about 154 sonnets started out as an actor.
Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564 Born in Stratford upon AvonBorn in Stratford upon Avon.
Background: The Theater and the Players. Before there were theaters… Acting was originally a transient endeavor. In other words, it was like the circus.
The Globe A Theater in the Round…. Although Shakespeare's plays were performed at other venues during the playwright's career, the Globe Theatre in the.
Structure, characters, and themes
The Renaissance Theater
Shakespeare and Elizabethan Drama. The Globe Shakespeare’s main theater was named The Globe. Shakespeare’s main theater was named The Globe. It was shaped.
The Globe A Theater in the Round….
The Globe Theater By: Katie Smith, Abigail Hagan, and Casey Stalker.
~Shakespeare. Little scenery Acting company known as the Lord Chamberlain’s Men and later as the King’s Men. They put on plays in many places. Bubonic.
Elizabethan Theatre UNIT 2.
The Globe Theater and Elizabethan Theatre
Richard II: Engendering Show. Conclusion of Last Class: the second gage scene represents the structure of the first but brings out the element of show.
Drama. A drama is a story enacted onstage for a live audience. What Is Drama?
A Christmas Carol Coursework. How and why does Scrooge’s character change throughout the book “A Christmas Carol”?
William Shakespeare.
Station #1 1. What day is Shakespeare’s birthday? 2. Who was Shakespeare’s wife? 3. Where was Shakespeare born?
Elizabethan Theatre Understand and explain what theatre was like in the time Shakespeare was writing.
Shakespeare’s Theater
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND DEFINITIONS OF TERMS STAGE APPLICATIONS
DRAMA Unit Sept
His life, his theater, and his works
The Theater and the Players
Lesson 1: Introduction.
The Theater and the Players
What do you need to hold onto Jesus, to press on in following Him??
Terms and Vocabulary to Remember
Elizabethan Theaters.
ELEMENTS OF DRAMA.
The Globe A Theater in the Round….
Renaissance Theatre History
Literary Terms to Know Ms. Palevsky English Concepts
Unit 8: Shakespeare Goal: to learn about the Shakespeare, his time period, and some basic drama terms.
Meditation XVII Guided Footnotes.
Misconceptions About The
ELEMENTS OF DRAMA.
The Elizabethan Theatre William Shakespeare
English Renaissance Theatre
William Shakespeare.
William Shakespeare ( )
Elements of drama.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
ENG 1D1 Tuesday May 19th.
Oedipus The King Background Info.
“Touched by More Than an Angel!” (Part 2)
You shall decree a thing The Power of Gods Word In our Mouth
Widely regarded as the greatest writer in English Literature
located bodies – five the sovereign body
Recognize God’s Gift Week of December 4, 2011.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Mark 4:22-23 (NKJV) 22 For there is nothing hidden which will not be revealed, nor has anything been kept secret but that it should come to light.
William Shakespeare And other odds and ends
Vision & Blindness King Lear: William Shakespear
Macbeth Act 2, Scenes 1-4.
The Epistle to the Ephesians
Presentation transcript:

Richard II: From Ceremony to Farce

What happens to Richard in the radically changing universe of the play where old Chain of Being values no longer apply?

Richard’s suffers a metaphorical destabilization of the old order in the language spoken about him directly after Bolingbroke’s speech: , p. 64 He then undergoes a literal, physical descent from the battlements, , pp

The Structure of the Elizabethan Public Stage: New Globe (exterior), 1996New Globe (exterior), 1996 Sketch of the Swan Theater (by Johannes de Witt), c. 1596Sketch of the Swan Theater (by Johannes de Witt), c New Globe (stage), 1995New Globe (stage), 1995 New Globe (heavens), 1996New Globe (heavens), 1996 Heavenly masquer who might be lowered from the “heavens” (1605)Heavenly masquer who might be lowered from the “heavens” (1605) Sketch of Globe (heavens and deux ex machina)Sketch of Globe (heavens and deux ex machina) New Globe (stage and galleries), 1997New Globe (stage and galleries), 1997

The overhanging canopy was called the “heavens” and the stage represented “the earth.” What did the yard or pit stand for where the groundlings stood? A)Street B)Hell C)Field D)Parlor E)Slum

On his downward trajectory from his high place as King, Richard comes to understand “Perspectural" destabilization: He comes to see his ordered universe (ordered by the old concept of the Chain of Being) as itself a “mere” fabricated conceit, or maskedness. He comes to see himself as mere story, a “representation,” increasingly open to interpretation. And, in viewing his reign thus awry, he comes to see the grievous skull in the picture of his ordered universe (his own mortality); , pp

Richard loses his sense of stable self, which is prelude to his losing His place (King) His name (speaking of himself in the third person, he says, “Must he lose / The name of king? A God’s name, let it go” ( , p. 33) His very being, as he becomes at the opening of Act 4, “nothing” (l. 200, p. 81) –“Ay, no; no, ay: for I must nothing be”

“Ay, no; no, ay: for I must nothing be” Could someone come up and write out on the board a possible translation of the first words of this line (up to the colon)? Possible interpretations of “Ay, no; no ay”: 1. Yes, no; no, yes 2. Yes, no; no I 3. I, no; no, I 4. I know no I

In his death-bed speech, John of Gaunt reproaches the King, nostalgically invoking the old Chain of Being order: (pp ) This speech belongs to the world of the first tournament: a ceremonious, static, corporate world (a chain of being).

What is the significance that in Gaunt’s long death-bed invocation of the old Chain of Being order, he finally introduces the verb to his sentence at l. 59: "Is now leas'd out“? A)The delayed verb stresses just how long-winded Gaunt is B)The delayed verb stresses the destabilizing of being by its sudden detaching of land from established identity through “leasing” C)The delayed verb shows how important it is for economics to finally enter into Gaunt’s and Richard’s vision

Ceremony Re-presented (pp ) clearly evokes the gage scene that opens the play. But it is left out of the BBC production. Let’s enact it: we need 8 volunteers (one non- speaking), using books for gages. Aumerle and Fitzwater need two books/gages.

What is Shakespeare's most likely purpose in inserting this second gage scene at this point in the play?

Conclusion: the second gage scene represents the structure of the first but brings out the element of show all men are playing out a political game oath-making becomes farce –And the farce keeps being re-presented, as in the ridiculous scene put on by the Duke and Duchess of York for Bolingbroke in Bolingbroke’s comment about this “show”: Our scene is alt’red from a serious thing, And now changed to “the Beggar and the King” ( )