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DHSHXMain MenuIntroduction: What's Digital Shakespeare?An explanation of why this book exists.Learning Goals & This BookThe learning goals that this book will addressWhere to Start in this BookA List of Primary Paths Available in the Book"DH" | Digital Methods for Literary StudyAn opening Page containing paths for learning about digital methods & the study of Literature/ShakespeareShakespeare: The BasicsShakespeare: The DigitalPath for how digital technology enhances the study of Shakespeare's worksUnits on Specific WorksHome Page for Paths with Specific Plays & Poems"DH" AssignmentsAssignments that make use of digital texts, tools, or bothVimala C. Pasupathiceefc20a3151658461abeb1911f30e5d016aa34bHeather Froehlich5639e57a03aa50c93c99bd45c43a043de977f7d9Emily Sherwoodad202272cf9b8dc4091c179ce0cc26ba6b98d81c
The Taming of the Shrew
12017-03-21T07:49:16-07:00Vimala C. Pasupathiceefc20a3151658461abeb1911f30e5d016aa34b101264Introduction to Unit/Module on Taming of the Shrewplain2017-04-07T14:13:23-07:00Kristin Denslowd8db7f971700e4dcd4236d9da7bfa6a4c3aba0e1What is The Taming of the Shrew About? For a plot synopsis, see the Folger edition's opening page. For a real understanding of the play, you'll need to read Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrewusing the assigned edition for your course, a specific edition required by your professor (strongly recommended). If your professor has not required a specific or hard-copy edition, you may choose your own from your favorite library or read the digital edition (linked previously) produced by the Folger Shakespeare Library. Avoid relying on internet summaries or modern-language re-tellings.
With respect to genre, The Taming of the Shrew is a comedy.
Geographical Movement—Who’s coming? Who’s going? Note who lives/arrives in Padua; consider where people who aren’t from there go once they get there.
Suitors and Suits––Who’s wooing? Who’s being wooed? Who’s who? Consider how the play’s bachelors woo the object of their desire and who they become or who they enlist for help in order to do so.
Women Speaking––Her turn to speak, or her speaking out of turn? Note when/whether women are “authorized” to speak in the various kinds of social settings the play presents. What words or behaviors define a woman as a “shrew”?
Gender and Marriage––What makes a person an ideal mate? Think about instances in the play in which characters imply or state directly the criteria that constitute the ideal woman/man; note instances that suggest what the norms of behavior are during the time period.
Male Social Behavior––friends and/or rivals? Keep track of the relationships between men in the play—how do men seem to regard one another, and what changes that regard?
Fathers and Children––Obedience vs. Independence Review places in the play that remind us of the characters’ status as the children of their parents. What circumstances allow people to act of their own accord? When are they constrained by parental rules or guidance? What differences exist between the relative degrees of independence male children have versus female children?
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12017-04-07T13:57:45-07:00Stephanie Murray5db2d0ac3fe60e885978bf5f2ec3416dbbea4167The Problem of WomenAndie Silva and DHSI #13 Class5Plays dealing with women and how problematic they insist on beingtags2018-02-09T19:47:39-08:00Andie Silva and DHSI #13 Class7199333d310a4d9270585a48f860715dbfd02068