King LearEven the most resolutely disengaged students can finally 'discover' and thrill to the rhythms and passions of Shakespeare's plays! Award-winning teachers and Shakespearean scholars have extensively trialled their approach to teaching Shakespeare's plays in the classroom, and this series is the result! The plays in this series are becoming increasingly popular for student resources in schools as English and Drama teachers discover their fabulous teaching and learning qualities. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 17
Seite 23
Hyperbole (hy-PER-bo-lee) involves the use of a deliberately exaggerated statement to emphasise a point. It is a figure of speech and is not to be taken literally. In this scene Gonerill claims to love her father more than 'eyesight', ...
Hyperbole (hy-PER-bo-lee) involves the use of a deliberately exaggerated statement to emphasise a point. It is a figure of speech and is not to be taken literally. In this scene Gonerill claims to love her father more than 'eyesight', ...
Seite 34
2 Which of the play's themes does this emphasise? 3 What sort of atmosphere is created by the organ music that opens the scene? 4 How does the actor playing the part ofEdmund seem to react to his father's conversation about him?
2 Which of the play's themes does this emphasise? 3 What sort of atmosphere is created by the organ music that opens the scene? 4 How does the actor playing the part ofEdmund seem to react to his father's conversation about him?
Seite 35
How does this position the audience to respond to her? 7 How is Kent's confrontation reinforced through camerawork? 8 What does Lear's costume emphasise about his personality? 6 9 Ofwhat does the costume used in this scene remind.
How does this position the audience to respond to her? 7 How is Kent's confrontation reinforced through camerawork? 8 What does Lear's costume emphasise about his personality? 6 9 Ofwhat does the costume used in this scene remind.
Seite 37
The switches in this scene between prose and poetry heighten the contrast between Edmund's private and public selves and emphasise his deceptive nature. • Astrology involves predicting events and people's fortunes by the movements of ...
The switches in this scene between prose and poetry heighten the contrast between Edmund's private and public selves and emphasise his deceptive nature. • Astrology involves predicting events and people's fortunes by the movements of ...
Seite 63
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Act 1 Scene ALBANY Albany’s audience Bedlam beggars blinding brother Burgundy characters Child Rowland complete the table contrast Copy and complete CORDELIA KING LEAR daughters death dost dramatic irony Duke Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloucester EDGAR GLOUCESTER EDGAR EDMUND GLOUCESTER emphasise enters Exit eyes father FOOL KENT FOOL KING LEAR Fool’s GENTLEMAN give GLOUCESTER EDGAR GLOUCESTER Gloucester’s castle gods Gonerill and Regan Gonerill’s hast hath heart iambic pentameter iambs imagery Jacobean KENT KING LEAR Kent’s KING LEAR FOOL KING LEAR KENT KING OF FRANCE King’s kingdom knave language LEAR FOOL KING LEAR KENT KING Lear’s letter lines Lord Madam man’s means nature night Nuncle Nunn nutshell OSWALD pathetic fallacy Peter Brook play’s poor Press PLAY Prithee Questions servant Shakespeare Shakespeare’s plays sister soliloquy speak storm Text notes thee There’s thine Trevor Nunn trochee villain words