Thursday, November 15, 2012

Shakespearean Webquest!


WebQuest on

William Shakespeare’s Life

 

Directions

Step 1:   Go on a “quest” to find a trusted website on William Shakespeare’s life and works.  Usually, you can trust a university site.  After you complete the webquest by filling in the blanks, list your sources at the bottom.

 

Step 2:  Add three images that demonstrate aspects of Shakespeare’s life and works.

 

Some suggested sites for you:


 


 

 

William Shakespeare’s Life and Works

 

William Shakespeare was born on April 23rd, 1564, and died on April 23rd, 1616.  During his lifetime and after his death, he was nicknamed the “Bard” or the "Bard of Avon".  When Shakespeare was eighteen years old, he married Anne Hathaway of the town Stratford on Avon.  She was 8  years older than he was.  They had 3 children and their son named Hamnet later died in childhood.  Shakespeare’s father was quite a prosperous merchant as a glove maker, which allowed William to attend school as a boy and study grammar Latin classes.  In 1580, Shakespeare left Stratford and moved to London to write and act in plays.

Throughout his writing career, William Shakespeare wrote 37  plays and 154 sonnets and 3 poems. 

 

 

Shakespeare’s London

 

William Shakespeare was living during an exciting time in the history of Great Britain.  Queen Elizabeth was the ruler of Great Britain and she reigned for 60 years.  The time period (1500’s – 1600’s) was known in Great Britain as the Renaissance, which means “rebirth.”  Three areas in which Great Britain was thriving in during this period of its history were literature, visual art, and music.  After the above monarch (ruler) dies, King James rose to the throne. 

One popular form of entertainment during Shakespeare’s life was the theatre.  William Shakespeare worked with a company of actors called the Lord Chamberlin's Men or the King's Men and they performed their plays at the famous Globe Theatre, located on the bank of the Thames River.  For the first time in English history, people of all classes were allowed to attend play performances at the Globe Theatre.  Three interesting facts about this theatre were that the Globe Theatre was built from reused wood from a theatre called The Theatre, that the theater was able to hold up to 3,000 people, and that the crest above the theatre's entrance read "totus mundus agit histrionem", which is Latin for "the whole world is a playhouse". During Shakespeare’s drama writing career, he wrote four of the most accomplished tragedies in literary history.  These four tragedies that he wrote between of 1604-1607 were Macbeth, Hamlet, Othello, and King Lear.  Eventually, Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre and other theatres were shut down by the religious groups and the Black Plague (which wiped out the population of half of Europe).  In 1613, the Globe Theatre was demolished by fire  due to malfunction of special effects. 

 After William Shakespeare’s death at the age of 52, his critic and friend Ben Johnson helped to gather all of Shakespeare’s works in order to get it published in one central bound book. This collection was titled First Folio. 

Today, audiences all over the world are still captivated by such plays as the one we are about to read entitled A Midsummer Night's Dream, one of William Shakespeare’s most popular love comedy.

 


 


 


 


 

 

Monday, November 12, 2012

It Review.

Conrad Gagnon
Yellows

I read the book It by Stephen King. I read the entire book, starting on September 29th and ending on November 8th, and I would rate it an eight. I would like to know what inspired Stephen King to write such strange and wonderfully disturbing books. Was it innate, or did something horrific or traumatic happen to him as a child? I wonder if Stephen King has coulrophobia, and that's why he decided to have It's default form a clown. If Stephen King has coulrophobia, then why would he write an entire book about it? Was he facing his fears, or have some kind of twisted addiction to mental masochism? I realized that the character Bill grows up to become a famous writer. Is Bill supposed to be Stephen King in the story? I think that Stephen King is a brilliantly horrifying and mysterious writer, and I love the way that he doesn't give away everything when he tells the story, he makes sure the reader always puts down the book wanting more. The image above is myself from two years ago in front of Stephen King's house in Maine. I thought that this image was relevant and worth sharing.