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Program Type: 
Thesis
Course Code: 
ELIT 659
Course Type: 
Area Elective
P: 
3
Lab: 
0
Credits: 
3
ECTS: 
15
Course Language: 
English
Course Objectives: 

This course will discuss novels based on different aspects of Shakespeare’s life, imagined biographies.

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) To explore adaptations of different aspects of Shakespeare’s life, imagined biographies. 1-4, 5-10 1,2,3 B, C, D
2) For the students to gain knowledge in the intellectual and cultural background of Shakespeare in comparative contexts and to become equipped with the concepts and terminology used in the analysis of literary texts. 1-4, 5-10 1,2,3 B, C, D
3) To equip the students with the necessary critical faculties, analytical approach, and interdisciplinary vision for a successful understanding of comparative literature. 1-4, 5-10 1,2,3 B, C, D
4) To analyse different definitions of “adaptation.” 1-4, 5-10 1,2,3 B, C, D
5) To discuss and contrast different positions in Shakespeare Studies. 1-4, 5-10 1,2,3 B, C, D

Course Flow

COURSE CONTENT
Week Topics Study Materials
1  

Intro. to Adaptation Theory

 

Materials for the course provided by instructor
2 Intro. to Adaptation Theory

 

 
3 Virginia Woolf: A Room of One’s Own  
4 Laura Shamas: The Other Shakespeare  
5 Doris Gwaltney: Shakespeare’s Sister  
6 Judith Beard: Romance of the Rose  
7 Grace Tiffany: My Father Had a Daughter: Judith Shakespeare’s Tale  
8 Mollie Hardwick: The Shakespeare Girl  
9 Peter W. Hassinger: Shakespeare’s Daughter  
10 Germaine Greer: Shakespeare’s Wife  
11 Germaine Greer: Shakespeare’s Wife  
12 Simon Hawke: The Slaying of the Shrew  
13 Erica Jong: Serenissima  
14 Conclusion  
15 Conclusion  

Recommended Sources

RECOMMENDED SOURCES
Textbook Margaret Jeane Kidnie: Shakespeare and the Problem of Adaptation

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

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

Linda Hutcheon: A Theory of Adaptation

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 of 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

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

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

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

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
Class Performance 1 30
Final Paper 1 40
Total   100
CONTRIBUTION OF FINAL PAPER TO OVERALL GRADE   40
CONTRIBUTION OF IN-TERM STUDIES TO OVERALL GRADE   60
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 exam week: 15x Total course hrs) 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