LIT 3041 () Renaissance Literature: Tudor/Stuart Drama Spring 2005
Class: MWF 12:50-1:40, TUR 2333
Office: Immediately after class, TUR 4111
E-Mail: irac@english.ufl.edu
In this course we will concentrate on reading one play per week from the middle of Elizabeth's reign to the closing of the theaters in 1642. As we do so we will focus on a number of contexts in which to understand them--such contexts as production and casting, illusion/reality/representation, language, rhetoric, and style, the development of techniques and genres, the relationship to society, economics, and politics . . . . The class will read along lines of historical development, first tragedies, then comedies, and finally tragicomedies. The development of the course should be from lecture towards discussion, with students gaining independence and proficiency in understanding the period, interpreting the plays, and arguing articulately for readings both orally and in writing.
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Grades will be based on eleven unannounced quizzes and three papers.
The brief unannounced
quizzes will occur intermittently and take a variety of forms (40% of
the grade); one may be dropped. The three papers will come due at the
end of each of the three sections of the course. Paper I should
argue for a detailed interpretation of some confined consideration of
some assigned tragedy (about
2000 words, 15% of the grade). Kinds of topics could be theatrical
considerations such as double
time, doubling roles, disguisings, props, symbolic stagings, one or
more soliloquys, asides, a song or
cluster of songs, a critical scene, an induction, a play-within-a-play,
parallel or contrasting scenes,
multiple plots, repeated or outstanding devices including rimes, puns,
riddles, orations, sound effects,
emblematic effects, image clusters, symbolic complexes, repeated
allusions. Paper II should argue
for a detailed interpretation of some confined consideration of some
assigned comedy as a synecdoche
for the whole play (about 3000 words, 20% of the grade). It might
expand topics into disciplinary
considerations such as narrative or dialectical or logical argument or
schematic development, history
of ideas, theology, philosophy, history of social or economic or
political attitudes, psychology and
character development, feminism, gender, deconstruction. Paper III
should present some argument
about any non-Shakespearean play of the era not assigned to the class
(up to 5000 words, 25% of the
grade). This paper might present a contextual-critical introduction to
some lesser known play or some
topic suggested above. All papers need to be discussed with me well
before they are due. All three
papers should be tightly argued, fully exemplified and interpreted, and
stylishly written. They must
be typed.
This course abides by the University's policies on plagiarism and academic honesty. Except for grave illness or death in the immediate family, I neither accept late work nor grant incompletes. For a student to earn credit for the course, that student must complete all work.
January 5 Introduction
7 Kyd: The Spanish Tragedy
10
12
14 Marlowe: Tamburlaine the Great, 1
19
21
26
28
31 Middleton?: The Revenger's Tragedy
February 2
4
7 Webster: The White Devil
9
11
16
18
23
24 Paper on a tragedy due by 9:00 a.m. Clark's mailbox
25
9
11
16
18
23
25
28 Jonson: The Alchemist
30
April 1
6
8
13
14 Paper on a comedy due by 9:00 a.m. Clark's mailbox
15
20
26 Paper on a non-Shakespearean play of the era due by 9:00
a.m.
Texts are available at Goerings' Book Store: English Renaissance Drama,
ed. David Bevington et al. Norton, 2002.