Are You In The Shakespeare Biz?

Here’s a question that just came to mind (thanks, Alan).  Are you “in the business”, so to speak, of Shakespeare?  What’s your connection?  Do you get to do it as a full time job, a side job, a hobby?  Wish you could do more? As I’ve said in the past, this blog is really it for my connection to Shakespeare.  I do it as much as I can.  Lately it’s also turned into “book reviewer”, which I kind of dig, because I get to read books I wouldn’t normally, which in turn has definitely increased my exposure to all things Shakespeare. One of these days I hope to get something published on the topic of teaching Shakespeare, if for nothing else than to put my money where my mouth is and see if I know what I’m talking about.  Of course, I’ve been saying that for years.  Maybe by the time my kids get to high school?  The computer programmer geek in me keeps trying to turn the project into something interactive, technologically speaking, but then I go down that path for awhile before falling back on good old print.   Ok, who’s next?

Romeo and Juliet Quiz

http://drb.lifestreamcenter.net/Lessons/RomJul/test_act_2-3.htm I love this.  A huge test on Romeo and Juliet (Acts 2 and 3).  If I didn’t have so much to do at my day job I would print it out, take it, and then research the answers myself to see how well I do.  It does cover lots of bases, ranging from “Who said this and why” to “Tell me if you understood the story properly” to “Is this an example of a simile or a metaphor”, so that’s good. Still, though, it always feels weird to me to break down the plays into such small bits.  To dissect something, first you have to kill it.  I have a different idea for a test – how about we go to a production of Romeo and Juliet, and then at intermission, ask people in the audience if they felt that the Friar knowledge of herbs was an example of foreshadowing.  Then ask whether or not they care, and whether or not the answer to that question impacts their enjoyment of the show.  Yes, we’re talking about education, so there are certain things you should be tested on.  But at some point can’t you appreciate it for a work of art, too? The true/false questions are interesting to me.  On the one hand I like some of them, like #9, which asks whether Juliet hates Romeo for killing Tybalt.  Since Juliet tells her *mother* that she hates Romeo, this question shows whether the student realizes that she was just saying that, and didn’t really mean it.  But then look at #12, “The Nurse comforts Juliet when her father says she must marry Paris.”  I went back and looked up the Nurse’s speech.  I’m not sure if “Look, Romeo is banished, and you could do worse than Paris” counts as “comforting”.  But isn’t that a matter of interpretation?  The Nurse probably thinks she’s being comforting, but Juliet pretty much never looks at her the same again (“ancient damnation, o most wicked fiend!”)  Yes, Juliet had asked for “comfort”, and that was the Nurse’s response, so perhaps the teacher expects a true answer her.  But, like the “I’m only telling my mother I hate Romeo, I don’t, really” thing from question #9, shouldn’t we take Juliet’s “thou hast comforted me marvellous much” to be equally deceptive?  Is comforting an active or a passive verb – does the person doing it or receiving it get to decide whether it worked? Maybe I’m nitpicking, but I think this is a big part of why I like to talk about Shakespeare, when we get to show examples of how people can miss the big picture because they’re too busy dissecting the individual word choices.  I’m cool with the reader having to interpret when Juliet’s words don’t match what she’s feeling – that’s something people do every day.  But when the hardest part of the question is determing what the teacher wants for an answer, because you can justify both, well, then you’re kind of stuck.

Shakespeare Cartoons

http://www.cartoonstock.com/search.asp?x=a&keyword=shakespeare&Category=Not+Selected&Boolean=Or&Artist=Not+Selected&submit=Search I don’t really love the quality of this site’s work, but it’s been in my saved pages for awhile and I figure it does have enough Shakespeare content to deserve a link.  This is a catalog of reprintable cartoons, with a Shakespeare theme.  Or rather, reference.  Many of them are variations on the “to be or not to be” thing.  There’s at least one with a typo (nice quality control).  And some I just don’t get at all — who is Fifi Oscard? What I did find amusing was artist “Kes”, who has 10 pieces in the catalog – 5 of which are Yorick jokes, with Hamlet posed the exact same way in each picture :).  I’ll bet it’s like writing greeting cards, you think of 10 variations on a single theme, so rather than going with the best one you just go with all of them.