Saturday, September 24, 2011

Week 6 Prompt: Close Reading Hamlet or Glossary Work (Choose One)

Due: Wednesday, September 28, 2011

This week you must choose from ONE of two options:
  • Option One: Choose a passage from Hamlet and perform a close reading. This is the same assignment you’ve been doing since the beginning of the semester. If you feel like you need practice close reading, you may want to choose this option. 
  • Option Two: Use the Bedford Glossary to answer a series of questions having to do with drama and plays. This option is intended to help you focus on the generic distinctions and nuances of drama. If you feel comfortable with your close reading skills, you may want to choose this option. 


OPTION ONE

Explanation

Close reading involves reading carefully and keeping your senses attuned to things within the text that strike you as interesting, disturbing, significant, etc. Be certain to mark the passage or passages that strike you, so that you can come back to them. Once finished, reread the striking parts, choose one that you find the most compelling, and describe how it works and what it means.

Remember, you do this by:
  • identifying what rhetorical effect/s are at work within the particular passage; 
  • explaining the way the rhetorical effect/s function in the context of the passage; 
  • and, finally, suggesting why the meaning, derived from the effect, is important for understanding the entire work. 
Close reading always moves from the particular (passage/effect) to the universal (entire text). From the effect you will provide a new way of reading the entire work. In many ways, this new reading forms the basis of your argument.

Requirements
  • Read Hamlet and perform a close reading 
  • Focus on a single passage that you feel is important 
  • Identify and interpret no more than two rhetorical effects at work within the passage 
  • Write your argument in 450 to 650 words 
  • EMAIL ME YOUR WRITTEN ARGUMENT IN .DOC OR .RTF FORMAT 
  • All assignments must be emailed to me by Wednesday, 6 pm. All late posts will automatically receive half credit. If the post is not emailed to me by Friday, 6 pm, it will receive no credit. 


OPTION TWO

In essay form (that is, with complete sentences and coherent, well-organized paragraph), please answer the following questions using your Bedford Glossary for assistance:
  • What is the difference between story and plot? 
  • What is the difference between drama and play? 
  • How does an Elizabethan tragedy, like Hamlet, differ from an ancient tragedy, like Oedipus Rex? 
  • What is a soliloquy and why is it important to understanding Hamlet
  • There are a number of soliloquy’s in Hamlet. In your opinion, which is the most important and why? 

Requirements
  • Read Hamlet and then begin answering the above questions 
  • Use your Bedford Glossary or the Oxford online resources to assist you in developing complete answers 
  • Write your answers in essay form, NOT as a list. Be sure that your essay is a coherent, well-organized response. In style, it should resemble a summary. 
  • Writer your answers in 450 to 650 words 
  • EMAIL ME YOUR WRITTEN ARGUMENT IN .DOC OR .RTF FORMAT 
  • All assignments must be emailed to me by Wednesday, 6 pm. All late posts will automatically receive half credit. If the post is not emailed to me by Friday, 6 pm, it will receive no credit. 

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