Teaching Shakespeare with Film and Television

A Guide

H R Coursen author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:30th Oct '97

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Teaching Shakespeare with Film and Television cover

Discusses strategies for teaching Shakespeare's plays through television and film and surveys available resources.

This reference book is a guide for helping teachers and students master the techniques of discussing productions of the plays of Shakespeare on film and television. It makes important distinctions between the two media and emphasizes the concept of the script.

Shakespeare is one of the world's most widely taught and most demanding authors. Fortunately, many of his plays have been adapted for film and television, and these productions are a valuable aid for helping students understand and respond to his works. This reference shows teachers and students how to master the techniques of discussing productions of his plays on film and television. It distinguishes the advantages and limitations of film and television as media for representing Shakespeare's dramas. The book then examines strategies for incorporating film and television productions in the classroom and provides many specific examples of how to write about these adaptations of the plays. The volume describes numerous educational resources, both in print and on cassette. This reference will prove invaluable to teachers and students of Shakespeare at all levels, particularly at a time when Shakespeare films are being produced at an unprecedented pace.

Although Shakespeare is one of the world's most widely taught authors, he is also one of the world's most demanding. Because of the popularity and sophistication of his works, numerous film and television adaptations of his plays have been made—some decades ago and others very recently. Shakespeare films are coming out at an unprecedented rate, as audiences continue to respond to the richness of his works. These productions are a valuable means of introducing students to Shakespeare's plays, for the film and television versions reflect different interpretations of his works. Although some productions are generally considered better than others, and all have various faults and virtues, each of them teaches us something about the play and the medium.

This reference book is a convenient guide for helping teachers and students master the techniques of discussing productions of the plays on film and television. It makes important distinctions between the two media, particularly about the conceptual and physical space available in each and the choices that space, or lack of it, impose on production. Central to the book is the concept of script, the words from which productions are generated. Because...

ISBN: 9780313300660

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

208 pages