The Course will enable the students to interpret Shakespearean plays by introducing the dramatic conventions of the Elizabethan Age to students, explain the key terms, concepts and dramatic genres in Shakespeare's plays to the students and to enlighten the students to critique the sonnets within an academic argument
Sonnets (To a Friend)
29 – When in disgrace…
30 – When to the sessions…
73 – That time of year…
94 – They that have power…
106 – When in the chronicle of…
123 – No, Time, thou shalt not…
Sonnets (To the Dark Lady)
127 – In the old age black…
129 – Th’ expanse of spirit…
130 – My mistress’ eyes are…
132 – Thine eyes I love…
137 – Thou blind fool, Love…
141 – In faith, I do not love…
Hamlet
As You Like it
The Tempest
Bate, Jonathan.The Genius of Shakespeare. OUP, 2008
Bradley. A.C. The Shakespearean Tragedy. Macmillan, 1904.
Grazia, Margreta De and Stanley Wells, Eds.The New Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare. CUP, 2010.
Hudson, Henry. Introduction to Shakespearean Tragedy. Atlantic Publishers & Distributors Pvt Ltd, 1987.
Maguire, Laurie, ed. Studying Shakespeare: A Guide to the Plays. Blackwell Pubications, 2003.
Peterson, Don.Reading Shakespeare’s Sonnets: A New Commentary. Faber & Faber, 2012.
Journals:
Shakespeare by British Shakespeare Association.
E-resources:
The Renaissance and Shakespeare, IIT Madras by Prof. Shormishtha Panja. https://nptel.ac.in/courses/109106120
The students will: CO43. Appraise Shakespeare’s use of literary and linguistic conventions in his plays and sonnets CO44. Critique the characters, structure, themes in Shakespeare’s texts, using secondary sources CO45. Attempt a close textual analysis of Shakespeare’s sonnets and plays CO46. Investigate the literary elements of the Renaissance observed in Shakespeare’s prescribed texts with a parallel analysis of the contemporary value of the same. CO47. Develop an understanding of Shakespeare’s classic works to achieve a broad and wholesome vision of life CO48. Contribute effectively to course-specific interaction. |