Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Week 7: Alternity

Benedict Cumberbatch in a 2015 production of Hamlet by the National Theater 
This week we will watch a play in class and then discuss it. We will be watching Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard. In order to understand the apporach of this play it is necessary to have seen an earlier play, Shakespeare's Hamlet. The reading assignment for this week is to read or watch Hamlet. Here are some links to some easily accessed versions of the play:

Mel Gibson's Hamlet features historical costume and sets. A very brooding Hamlet more focused on the emotion and action of the play than on the language. Sort of Hamlet as Road Warrior. Directed by the great set designer in a somewhat operatic fashion, Franco Zeffirelli. Not a very accurate text of the play, trimmed for speedier production and streamlined.

Dr. Who/Star Trek Hamlet. A very interesting production featuring David Tennant and Patrick Stewart in a fairly clear production featuring the orginal language of the play. This is a good version to watch for this week's class. Here in parts on You Tube. Act 1, Scene 1; Act 1, Scene 2 part 1; Act 1, Scene 2 part 2; Act 1, Scene 3; Act 1, Scene 4, part 1; Act 1, Scene 4, part 2; Act 2, Scene 1; Act 2, Scene 2, part 1a (this is Rosencratz and Guildenstern scene); Act 2, Scene 2, part 1 (famous soliloquy); Act 1, Scene 2, part 2; Act 2, Scene 2, part 3; Act 2, Scene 2, part 4; Act 3, Scene 1; Act 3, Scene 2, part 1; Act 3, Scene 2, part 2; Act 3, Scene 3; Act 3, Scene 4, part 1; Act 3, Scene 4, part 2; Act 3, Scene 5 and 6; Act 4, Scene 1, part 1; Act 4, Scene 1, part 2; Act 4, Scene 2 and 3; Act 5, Scene 1, part 1; Act 5, Scene 1 part 2; Act 5, Scene 2 part 1; Act 5, Scene 2, part 2.  

Kenneth Branagh Hamlet, one of the most complete versions on film. Long, but it is pretty much all there and well-produced and spoken.  Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4.

Play Video of Hamlet in a WWI era production. Like seeing the play performed live. Basic production with some interpretative spin. 

A Vintage Production in Armenian. Just interesting to see Hamlet in another language. If you watch a little of this and you know the play you can catch ideas about characterization and theme even if you can't understand what they are saying. Similarly interesting is this version from Indian Cinema, not in English.

Netflix is currently offering Hamlet 2000 a corporate media empire setting of Hamlet starring Ethan Hawke and featuring, Kyle MacLachlan, Julia Stiles and Bill Murray.


Monday, November 9, 2015

Week 13: Celebrity: Performance as Self


Andre the Giant publicity shot
Donald Trump
This week I am asking you to read a short graphic biography of the wrestler/entertainer Andre the Giant by Box Brown. It is interesting to see how Brown tells the story in words and pictures. It is not told in a particularly bravura style that one sees in many graphic novels that aspire to certain greatness of effect. It is a more vernacular and rough cast; more wrestling in style and tone. It is at times coarse, not ulike the book's subject,  a personality who is in the most literal senese, larger than life.
I hope to discuss other celebrity phenomena like Kim Kardashian who has mastered private life as a mode of performance in a fluid and mobile mediascape. We will read an essay in class on politics as entertainment and discuss it. We will consider the representation of Donald Trump as a political meme. What elements of performance, entertainment and celebrity are evident in the current climate of political discourse? What are the objects of this discourse, what are the subjects?  What are the effects?

Monday, October 26, 2015

Week 11: Auteurship

This week we continue our consideration of the voice of the author by reading Asterios Polyp by David Mazzuchelli (or one of the other selected graphic novels you may choose as an alternative). After you read the graphic novel, write a blog post that describes the "voice" of the author as it is made evident in specific and concrete examples from the work you read. Make sure those examples reflect both the written and visual modes of the work. In class this week we will extend this discussion from multi-modal narratives like graphic novels to some specific films asociated with filmakers we might consider "auteurs." 

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Week 10: Voice in Contemporary Literature

The reading assignment for this week is to read the novella (long short story) by Karen Russell entitled Sleep Donation. Having read her short story, "Vampires in the Lemon Grove," in-class you should be prepared to describe her "voice" as a contemporary writer. In writing your blog post consider what do we mean when we talk about a writer's voice? What are some of the elements we might describe? What do we mean by "tone" as a general term and how might we describe the "tone" Karen Russell has in her fiction? What is the relationship between an author's tone and an author's voice?

Here is a link to a helpful short article on an author's tone.

Here is a link to a very short article on an author's voice and how an author's voice is distinct from the voices of an author's characters.