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Program Type: 
Thesis
Course Code: 
ELIT 636
Course Type: 
Area Elective
P: 
3
Lab: 
0
Credits: 
3
ECTS: 
15
Course Language: 
English
Course Objectives: 

The aim of this course is to explore the influence of Shakespeare on World literature up to the present day.

Course Content: 

Authors who may be discussed in relation to Shakespeare include Voltaire, Goethe, Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Chekhov and Brecht.

Teaching Methods: 
1: Lecture, 2: Question-Answer, 3: Discussion, 4: Simulation, 5: Case Study
Assessment Methods: 
A: Testing, B: Class Performance, C: Homework, D: Presentation

Vertical Tabs

Course Learning Outcomes

Learning Outcomes Program Outcomes Teaching Methods Assessment Methods
1) Detailed textual analysis of Shakespeare’s plays. 1-4, 6-10 1,2,3,5 C, D
2) Knowledge of Shakespeare’s sources and his use of them. 1-4, 6-10 1,2,3,5 C, D
3) Reading of Shakespeare in terms of symbolic interpretation and metaphors. 1-4, 6-10 1,2,3,5 C, D
4) Reading Shakespeare in terms of later critical approaches, in particular feminist readings. 1-4, 6-10 1,2,3,5 C, D
5) Analysis and comparison of contemporary adaptations of Shakespeare. 1-4, 6-10 1,2,3,5 C, D

Course Flow

COURSE CONTENT
Week Topics Study Materials
1 Introduction Materials for the course provided by instructor
2 Winter’s Tale-Jeanette Winterson: The Gap of Time  
3 Merchant of Venice-Howard Jacobson: Shylock is My Name  
4 Taming of the Shrew-Anne Tyler: Vinegar Girl  
5 King Lear-Edward St Aubyn: Dunbar; Jane Smiley: A Thousand Acres; Lear/Cordelia (King Lear by Ben Spiller, Cordelia by Farrah Chaudhry)  
6 The Tempest-Margaret Atwood: Hagseed; Neil Gaiman: The Tempest; Aimee Cesaire: A Tempest; Grace Tiffany: Ariel, Marina Warner: Indigo  
7 Othello-Tracy Chevalier: New Boy; Toni Morrison: Desdemona  
8 Macbeth-Jo Nesbo: Macbeth  
9 Hamlet-Ian McEwan: Nutshell, Iris Murdoch: The Black Prince; John Updike: Gertrude and Claudius  
10 Richard III- Josephine Tey: The Daughter of Time  
11 Peter Ackroyd: Shakespeare: The Biography  
12 Stephen Greenblatt: Will in the World  
13 Antony Burgess: Shakespeare  
14 Mollie Hardwick: The Shakespeare Girl  
15 Peter W. Hassinger: Shakespeare’s Daughter  

Recommended Sources

RECOMMENDED SOURCES
Textbook The Arden Shakespeare
Additional Resources Marjorie Garber: Shakespeare After All

A.C. Bradley: Shakespearean Tragedy

Stephen Greenblatt: Will in the World

Stephen Greenblatt: Hamlet in Purgatory

Jan Kott: Shakespeare our Contemporary

James Shapiro: William Shakespeare and the Year of Lear

Catherine Belsey: The Subject of Tragedy: Identity and Difference in Shakespearean Drama

Catherine Belsey: Shakespeare in Theory and Practice

Catherine Belsey: Why Shakespeare?

Catherine Belsey: Shakespeare and the Loss of Eden

Reneé Girard: A Theatre or Envy

Hester Jeffries-Lees: Shakespeare and Memory

Harold Bloom: Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human

Ed. Cary Di Pietro and Hugh Grady: Shakespeare and the Urgency of Now: Criticism and Theory in the 21st Century

Christofides, R. M William-Shakespeare and the Apocalypse: Visions of Doom from Early Modern Tragedy to Popular Culture

Garrett A. Sullivan-Memory and Forgetting in English Renaissance Drama

Lynn Enterline-The Rhetoric of the Body from Ovid to Shakespeare

Ed. Alexa Huang and Elizabeth Rivlin: Shakespeare and the Ethics of Appropriation

Stephen Greenblatt: Shakespeare’s Freedom

Antony Tatlow: Shakespeare, Brecht, and the Intercultural Sign

Colin Mc Ginn: Shakespeare’s Philosophy: Discovering the Meaning Behind the Plays

David Scott Kastan: Shakespeare after Theory

Stanley Cavell: Disowning Knowledge in Seven Plays of Shakespeare

John Drakakis: Alternative Shakespeares

Ed. Laurie Maguire: How to Do Things with Shakespeare: New Approaches, New Essays

Linda Hutcheon: A Theory of Adaptation

Margaret Jeane Kidnie: Shakespeare and the Problem of Adaptation

Ed. Margareta de Grazia and Stanley Cavell: The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare

Robin Headlam Wells: Shakespeare’s Humanism

Ed. Patricia Parker and Geoffrey Hartman: Shakespeare and the Question of Theory

Stanley Cavell: Shakespeare, Sex and Love

Terence Hawkes. Alternative Shakespeares

Janet Adelman: Suffocating Mothers

Douglas Lanier: Shakespeare and Popular Culture

Richard Wilson: Shakespeare in French Theory: King of Shadows

Ed. Jennifer Ann Bates and Richard Wilson: Shakespeare and Continental Philosophy

Peter Holland: Shakespeare: Memory and Performance

Dale Townshend: Gothic Shakespeares

Jacques Derrida: Specters of Marx

Grace Tiffany: Erotic Beasts and Social Monsters

Annabel Patterson: Shakespeare and the Popular Voice

Stephen Greenblatt: Shakespearean Negotiations

Catherine Belsey: Shakespeare and the Loss of Eden: The Construction of Family Values in Early Modern Culture

Regina Maria Schwartz: Loving Justice, Living Shakespeare

Assessment

ASSESSMENT
IN-TERM STUDIES NUMBER PERCENTAGE
Presentation 1 30
Final Project 1 70
Total   100
CONTRIBUTION OF FINAL PAPER TO OVERALL GRADE   70
CONTRIBUTION OF IN-TERM STUDIES TO OVERALL GRADE   30
Total   100

Course’s Contribution to Program

COURSE'S CONTRIBUTION TO PROGRAM
No Program Learning Outcomes Contribution
1 2 3 4 5
1 The ability to apply knowledge of English and world literature and social sciences to topics including culture, society, ethics, politics etc.         x
2 The ability to review, analyse and apply the relevant literature.         x
3 The ability to carry out interdisciplinary reading and analysis.         x
4 The ability to utilise the basic concepts and issues of literary theories in developing life strategies         x
5 Awareness of professional ethics and responsibility x        
6 Effective communication skills.         x
7 A sufficiently broad education to understand the global and social impact of literary movements.         x
8 An awareness of the importance of lifelong learning and the ability to put it into practice.         x
9 Knowledge of issues in contemporary literature and of the cultural issues of the period.         x
10 The ability to use sources and modern tools in order to carry out research in the areas of literature and aesthetics.         x

ECTS

ECTS ALLOCATED BASED ON STUDENT WORKLOAD BY THE COURSE DESCRIPTION
Activities Quantity Duration
(Hour)
Total
Workload
(Hour)
Course Duration (Including the exam week: 15x Total course hours) 15 3 45
Hours for off-the-classroom study (Pre-study, practice) 14 17 252
Presentation 1 18 18
Final Paper 1 60 60
Total Work Load     375
Total Work Load / 25 (h)     15.0
ECTS Credit of the Course     15