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A Midsummer Night’s Dream

A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

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Page 1: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Page 2: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

Historical Background• Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I

(born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603)• Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

versus Protestant revolts; Elizabeth returns country to Protestantism when she gets the crown.

• Defeat of Spanish Armada in 1588 confirmed England’s status as a world power

• Black Plague persists (1300-1700: estimated death of 1/3 world’s population)

• Relative stability and length of Elizabeth’s reign, and her love of the humanities, led to transformation of English literature, especially plays and poetry

Page 3: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

Elizabethan Actors

• First time in England’s history that actors became professional (did full-time and make a living)

• Troupes often under patronage of royal member of court (example: Lord Chamberlain’s Men)

• Much of the public thought acting a “low” profession

• Men only! Young boys played female parts.

Page 4: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

Elizabethan TheatersThe Globe

• outside London• simple sets used• open-roofed,

“wooden O”• “Groundlings”

stood, middle class sat, royalty top tier

• often closed because of plague

Page 5: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

• Born in Stratford-upon-Avon, 75 miles NW of London. Middle-class family.

• Married Anne Hathaway at age 18 (in 1582) and moved to London shortly afterward. Wife and children stayed in Stratford. Long periods away from home.

• Actor, poet, playwright, manager / shareholder

• Wrote 38 plays, 154 sonnets• Borrowed heavily from other plays and

literary sources. • Authorship Controversy• Retired to Stratford home after Globe

Theater burnt down. Died at age 52.

Page 6: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

• First performed approx. 1595

• One of Shakespeare’s few “original” plays

Major Themes:• What is real and what is

false?• All’s fair in love and war• “Love looks not with the

eyes, but with the mind” (Act I, scene i)

Page 7: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

The Artisans• Peter Quince: carpenter• Nick Bottom: weaver (“bottom”

of thread reel)• Snug: “joiner” (cabinet-maker,

makes “snug” joints)• Flute: bellows-maker (for church

organ; has high-pitched voice)• Snout: “tinker” (fixes kettle

spouts)• Robin Starveling: tailor (tailors

were often poor in E. Age)

Page 8: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

LITERARY TERMS

Page 9: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

COMIC RELIEF• The interruption of (or relief

from) tragedy, with a humorous incident or scene.

• Shakespeare often uses servants, clowns and jesters to “lighten the mood” before or after a particularly dramatic scene.

• In Midsummer Act I, the humor of Scene 2 follows the seriousness of Scene 1.

Page 10: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

ALLUSION

• A reference to something famous, such as another literary work, historical event, well-known person, etc.

• Shakespeare often alludes to mythology and folklore commonly known in the Elizabethan era.

• The myth of Pyramus and Thisbe is central in Midsummer.

Page 11: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

FOIL

• A character whose personality or attitudes are in sharp contrast to those of another character in the same story

• As you read Midsummer, think of the following pairs:

Hermia / Helena Peter Quince/ Nick Bottom Oberon / Titania

Page 12: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

SOLILOQUY

• A speech that one character gives when he or she is alone on stage

• Reveals personal thoughts; as if we’re inside their head

• Different from monologue, when one character speaks uninterrupted for several lines when others are around on stage

• Example: Helena at end of I:i

Page 13: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

ASIDE

• A character’s remark, either to another character or to the audience, that others on stage are not supposed to hear

• Often indicated in parenthetical stage directions, like this: (aside)

Page 14: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

FORESHADOWING• A writer’s use of hints

or clues to indicate events that will occur later in the story.

• Suspenseful, sometimes ironic

• Examples: Helena’s “love looks not with the eyes” foreshadows Puck’s mixup

Page 15: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

IRONY

• subtle (not obvious) humor, as determined by context.

Three kinds often used:• VERBAL: difference between

what is said and what is meant, often using sarcasm

• Example: “What is Pyramus? A lover, or a tyrant?” (I:ii) Bottom ironically suggests they are the same, echoing the theme, “All’s fair in love and war.”

Page 16: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

IRONY (continued)

• SITUATIONAL: when a character or reader expects one thing to happen but something else actually occurs.

• Example: Hermia and Lysander expect to meet in Act II and get married. What actually happens?

Page 17: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

IRONY (continued)

• DRAMATIC: when the reader or a character knows something that another character does not know.

• Example: At the end of Act I, when the artisans plan to rehearse in the woods, we (the audience) know something the artisans do not: Hermia and Lysander plan to meet there as well to elope.

Page 18: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Historical Background Elizabethan Age: Queen Elizabeth I (born 1533, rules from 1558 to 1603) Catholic (Queen Mary, 1553-1558)

THE END