COD 2008 - S243
William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar Revisited
High School teachers (especially those training students for AS literature).
1
sesiones, inicia: 11-Jun
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Ficha del curso
Ciclo: 2008
Nivel: Secundaria
Idioma: Inglés
Estado: Terminado
Lugar: ESSARP - Deheza 3139, CABA
Capacitador/es: Claudia Ferradas PhD
Colegios Afiliados
ARS
ARS
Centros de Examen
ARS
ARS
No afiliados
ARS 45.00
ARS 45.00
Sesiones
Sesiones | Fechas | Inicia | Termina |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 11 Junio 2008 | 05:30 pm | 08:30 pm |
Capacitador/es
Claudia Ferradas
High School teachers (especially those training students for AS literature).
To get teachers to:
- Evaluate the obstacles that make it difficult to approach this dramatic text with adolescents whose native tongue is not English, as well as the points that make it a good choice.
- Discuss the relevance of the play today.
- Discuss approaches and develop techniques to approach the play in the high school classroom, exploring cross-curricular activities and gaps of indeterminacy.
- Explore tasks which can help students who are being trained for the AS examination.
- Relate the play intertextually to other discourse genres and media.
- Shakespeare's dramatic handling of historical raw material.
- Character and theme.
- The role of ritual in the play.
- Different theoretical points of entry (female roles in a men’s world, exploring the silences in the text, the power of discourse over the mass, rationalisation of motives, etc.).
- Exploiting the dramatic text in class.
- A look into performance through film.
Workshop: participants will discuss different entry points that may motivate students to read on, analyse different literary aspects of the play, analyse film versions of the play and discuss their usefulness in the classroom, and design AS-type tasks in groups.
- Bloom, H. (1998). Shakespeare - The Invention of the Human. New York: Riverhead Books: Chapter 9: "Julius Caesar", pp. 104 - 118.
- Dollimore, J & Sinfield, A. (eds) (1985). Political Shakespeare. New Essays in Cultural Materialism. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
- Eagleton, T. (1986) William Shakespeare. Oxford: Blackwell. Rereading Literature Series.
- Elsom, J. (ed.) (1989) Is Shakespeare Still our Contemporary? London & N.Y.: Routledge.
- Goddard, H. C. (1960) The Meaning of Shakespeare. Vol. 1. Chicago: Phoenix: chapter XXII: "Julius Caesar", pp.307 - 330.
- Gibson, R. (1998) Teaching Shakespeare. Cambridge: C. U. P.: Cambridge School Shakespeare.
- Legatt, A. (1988) Shakespeare's Political Drama. London and New York: Routledge: Chapter 6: "Julius Caesar", pp. 139 - 160.
- Spencer, T. (1961) Shakespeare and the Nature of Man. London: Macmillan.
- Wilson Knight, C. (1979) The Imperial Theme. London: Methuen: Chapter III: "The Eroticism of Julius Caesar", pp. 63 – 95.