Women on the Shakespearean Stage - ENGL2101 |
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Description Studies the social and sexual roles of leading female characters in English drama from the late 1590s to the early 1630s, beginning with an analysis of female characters' experience of the 'love-death nexus' in four of Shakespeare's plays and concludes with a consideration of the 'lost' status and state ascribed to 'loose' women in plays by some of Shakespeare's major contemporaries.
Learning Outcomes By the end of the course students should be able to identify key issues connected with the presentation of female characters on the Shakespearean stage. They should be able to engage critically with these issues in relation to specific texts, and in a range of oral and written modes. They should have acquired a working knowledge of performance and theatrical issues, and of relevant theoretical approaches.
Assessment
Note: Satisfactory completion of each form of assessment is a course requirement.
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