shakespeare’s julius caesar background on shakespeare and the play

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Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

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Page 1: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare’sJulius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Page 2: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Test your knowledge of Shakespeare’s life and work. Where and when was Shakespeare born? What famous actress shares a name with

Shakespeare’s wife and how old were they when they married?

What three categories of plays did Shakespeare compose?

What was the name of his acting troupe? What was the name of his theater? How was it different from the other ones

common in London at the time?

Page 3: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare as a writer:

Why do people think Shakespeare didn’t really write the works to which his name is attributed?

Whom do some scholars think may have written his work?

How many plays did he write before his death?

How many sonnets did he write before his death?

Page 4: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare’s theater:

How many stories was his theater?Where did the wealthy sit?Where did the “groundlings” stand?Did they have elaborate costumes?Did they have a lot of props and scenery?Did they have special effects?Who played women’s roles?

Page 5: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare’s techniques:

How are Shakespeare’s plays structured?What is a Soliloquy? What is an apostrophe?What is an aside?What is a pun?What is imagery? How is it especially important in Shakespeare’s work?

Page 6: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare’s time:

Who was the famous queen after whom this period was named?

What other names does this period have?

What was England accomplishing globally at this time?

What power did people at the time attribute to the stars?

Did women have the right to vote?

Page 7: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

April 23, 1564: William Shakespeare was born in Stratford-on-Avon to John and Mary Shakespeare. There is a baptismal registration for Shakespeare, but few other written records exist. He was the 3rd of 8 children.

Page 8: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

1582: According to church records, Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway.

At the time of their marriage, William was eighteen and Anne was twenty-six.

Page 9: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare wrote:

Comedies - light and amusing, usually with a happy ending (A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Taming of the Shrew)

Tragedies –serious dramas with flawed characters who cause disastrous endings (Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello)

Histories – involve events or persons from history (Julius Caesar, Henry VIII)

Page 10: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

1594: William became involved with a company of actors named “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men.” This group later (1603) changed their name to “The King’s Men”.

Page 11: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

In 1598, Shakespeare, in collaboration with other actors, designed and built The Globe.

This circular theatre was the first of its kind, breaking away from the traditional rectangular theatres.

Page 12: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Are you sure he wrote this stuff?

Edward deVere (Earl of Oxford)

Christopher Marlowe

Francis Bacon

Page 13: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

At the time of his death, Shakespeare is said to have written around 37 plays and 154 sonnets. He is also known to have contributed over two thousand words to the English language.

Page 14: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare also came up with many phrases:• Eaten out of house and home• Pomp and circumstance• Foregone conclusion• Full circle• The makings of• Method in the madness• Neither rhyme nor reason• One fell swoop• Seen better days• It smells to heaven• A sorry sight• A spotless reputation• Strange bedfellows• The world's (my) oyster

Page 15: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play
Page 16: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

THE GLOBE THEATER:Round/polygonal building with a roofless courtyard

No artificial light

Three stories high – upper levels or “galleries” were for the wealthy

The “groundlings” paid a penny a piece to stand on the floor in front of the stage—”the pit” (800 people)

Large platform stage

Back of platform was curtained off inner stage

Two door entrances/exits on either side of curtain

Small balcony/upper stage

Elaborate costumes but no props

Young boys played the parts of women; women were not allowed to be actors

Page 17: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Internal structure of Elizabethan theaters

Tiring house

gallery

The “pit” & groundlings

stage

“heaven”

Page 18: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Dramatic Terminology

Tragedy: A narrative that ends in destruction, in which main character makes a tragic mistake due to a flaw that causes an error in judgment.

The play is broken up into acts and the acts are broken up into scenes.

Monologue: A long uninterrupted speech given by one character onstage to everyone.

Soliloquy: A long uninterrupted speech given by one character alone on stage, inaudible to other characters.

Apostrophe: A line directed toward someone not present, or inanimate object for dramatic purposes (not in expectation of a response.)

Aside: A short speech given by one character, traditionally the other characters cannot hear (a character’s thoughts aloud.)

Page 19: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

The Globe

Page 20: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Dramatic Terminology

Imagery: use of sensory detail • The salty scent of the beach lingered on our sandy toes.• He savored the first bite of the apple pie, with its layers of sweet fruit

filling.

Pun: A humorous play on words

• Energizer Bunny arrested - charged with battery.

• Corduroy pillows are making headlines.

• The executioner decided to drop out of Executioner School. It was just too cut throat for him.

Page 21: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Shakespeare’s Five Part Storytelling Pattern:

Act I: Exposition

Establishes setting, characters, conflict, and background

Act II: Rising Action

A series of complications

Act III: Crisis/Turning Point

A series of complications

Act IV: Falling Action

Results of the turning point; characters locked into deeper disaster

Act V: Climax/Resolution/Denouement

Death of the main characters and then the loose parts of the plot are tied up

Page 22: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Elizabethan Period:

Queen Elizabeth reigned 1558–1603. Known as the Golden Age or Renaissance Period of international expansion, and naval triumph

over the Spanish Armada. It was the end of the period when England was a

separate realm before its royal union with Scotland. English empire was growing as it claimed colonies across

the world. Elizabethan superstition: they relied heavily on astrology

and the stars. Women: Married women lost all control of their property,

even clothing, to their husbands. They could not vote.

Page 23: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Quotes that have lived through the Ages

"Beware the ides of March."Soothsayer, Act I, Scene II

"Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once.” Julius Caesar, Act II, Scene II

"Et tu, Brute! Then fall, Caesar."Julius Caesar, Act III, Scene I

"Cry 'Havoc' and let slip the dogs of war” Mark Anthony, Act III, Scene I

"Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.” Mark Anthony, Act III, Scene II

"This was the noblest Roman of them all” Mark Anthony, Act V, Scene V

"Beware the ides of March."Soothsayer, Act I, Scene II

"Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once.” Julius Caesar, Act II, Scene II

"Et tu, Brute! Then fall, Caesar."Julius Caesar, Act III, Scene I

"Cry 'Havoc' and let slip the dogs of war” Mark Anthony, Act III, Scene I

"Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.” Mark Anthony, Act III, Scene II

"This was the noblest Roman of them all” Mark Anthony, Act V, Scene V

Page 24: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Literary Focus Mood Setting

Overcast of impending doom, darkness and catastrophe—look for the motif of omens and foreboding signs.

Themes of betrayal, revenge and man’s thirst for power. Is Shakespeare saying there is no trust left, only manipulation and corruption?

Julius Caesar is largely set in Rome, 44 B.C.

Ancient Rome Tiber River the Capitol the house of the Senate The Forum

Page 25: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Julius Caesar

Dramatizes the events leading to the murder of Caesar and the struggle to control Rome after Caesar’s assassination

Based on Plutarch’s Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans

Page 26: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

The Roman Republic – The Roman Republic – a government of many levels & a government of many levels & dutiesduties

PatriciansPatricians – old noble families, wealthy middle class; had much power

PlebeiansPlebeians – working class citizens, represented but with little power

ConsulsConsuls – highest ranking officials, presided over Senate and all elections

SenateSenate – Rome’s ruling body, selected by consuls

TribunesTribunes – only plebeians as elected officials; could veto Senate decrees; immune from arrest; many were assassinated when they stood in the way of a senator’s ambition

Page 27: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

The Republic

NOT a true democracy Patricians fought for power During crisis, powerful man could be

dictator YET…more people had a VOICE Rome looked down on monarchs By 44BC, Romans were convinced that

ambitions of one man threatened the Republic

Page 28: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

The Scene…

Based on a true story, this play takes place in Ancient Rome, where Julius Caesar has just returned in triumph from war.

The crowd hails him as their new leader, but there are some Romans who fear he will become too powerful of a ruler, more like an emperor, and they will lose the liberties they have enjoyed as citizens of a free state.

Page 29: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

A small group of men conspire to assassinate Caesar, believing they are acting to preserve the freedoms of the Roman Republic.

Page 30: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

They surround him in the Forum, and stab him to death.

Death of Caesar

Page 31: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

The play goes on to tell the story of what happens after the murder, as the conspirators quarrel among themselves, war erupts, and liberties, instead of being protected, appear to be lost.

Page 32: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

The main characters

Caesar Brutus (tragic hero) Antony Cassius Conspirators (Casca, Trebonious, Decius Brutus,

Cinna and Metallus Cimber) Calpurnia (Caesar’s wife) Portia (Brutus’ wide) Soothsayer (seer—warns “Beware the Ides of

March!”

Page 33: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Julius Caesar

He is the head of the Roman state. He is a great soldier, and has just returned from a series of wars during which he defeated the sons of the previous Roman ruler, Pompey.

He is popular with the crowds that stand in the streets to greet his triumphal return, cheering and clapping. Calpurnia is Caesar’s wife.

Page 34: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Mark Antony

He is a loyal friend and supporter of Caesar, who he believes will make a good ruler of Rome. He is appalled at the killing of the head of state, and although he shakes hands with the conspirators immediately after the murder, he vows to avenge Caesar’s death.

He gives a funeral oration over Caesar’s dead body that stirs the crowd to anger and desire for revenge. He will be one of the three rulers of Rome, after Caesar’s death, and he gathers an army to fight the killers.

Page 35: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

BrutusHe is a respected Roman, a

man of intelligence and honor, who is a personal friend of Caesar, yet wonders whether, as a ruler, he will overstep his powers and become a tyrant rather than a good head of state.

He is finally convinced to join the conspirators as their leader. As they raise their daggers to commit the murder, Caesar recognizes his dear friend and cries, in Latin, “Et tu, Brute?” or “You too, Brutus?” Portia is Brutus’ wife.

Page 36: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Other conspirators

Casca, Trebonious,Decius, Cinna and Metallus Cimber are the other members of the conspiracy, each of whomparticipates by stabbing Caesar.

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Cassius

Cassius is one of the leaders of the conspiracy. He is suspicious of Caesar from the beginning, gathers others into the band, and convinces Brutus to join with them in their plans for assassination.

He and Brutus flee Rome after the killing, each gathers an army, and they try to conquer Mark Antony’s army.

Page 38: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Background on Shakespeare and the play

Octavius and Lepidus are the other two who join with Mark Antony after Caesar’s death to rule Rome as a triumvirate.