Shakespeare Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Shakespeare’s Chronology – Born 23 Apr 1564 (baptised 26 Apr), active in London 1592‑1613, died 23 Apr 1616.
Theatrical Companies – Shareholder in Lord Chamberlain’s Men (later King’s Men after 1603 royal patent).
Play Classification (First Folio, 1623) – 36 plays split into Comedies, Histories, Tragedies; two extra plays (Two Noble Kinsmen, Pericles) now accepted.
Blank Verse – Unrhymed iambic pentameter (10 syllables/line, alternating unstressed‑stressed).
Soliloquy – A character’s spoken thoughts alone on stage; pioneered in Richard III, perfected in Hamlet.
Textual Types – Quarto (early, sometimes “bad” versions) vs. Folio (1623 collected edition).
📌 Must Remember
Birthdate: 23 Apr 1564 (Saint George’s Day).
Key theatres: Globe (1599, outdoor) & Blackfriars (1608, indoor).
Early “lost years”: 1585‑1592, no records.
First published poems: Venus and Adonis, The Rape of Lucrece (1593‑94).
Sonnets: 154 poems, published 1609; address a “fair youth” and a “dark lady”.
Major tragedies (pre‑1608): Romeo & Juliet, Julius Caesar, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth.
Problem plays: Measure for Measure, Troilus and Cressida, All’s Well That Ends Well, Hamlet (dual‑genre).
Late romances: Cymbeline, The Winter’s Tale, The Tempest, Pericles (collab).
Collaborations: Henry VIII, The Two Noble Kinsmen (with John Fletcher); later three plays likely with Fletcher.
First Folio publication: 1623 by John Heminges & Henry Condell.
🔄 Key Processes
Play Production Cycle (Elizabethan/Late‑Jacobean)
Write → Shareholder‑company approval → Rehearsal (indoor/outdoor) → Performance (summer at Globe, winter at Blackfriars) → Print (quarto or later folio).
Textual Transmission
Author’s manuscript → Actors’ notes → Prompt‑books → Printer’s quarto → Possible “bad quarto” (memory‑based) → Later corrected in folio edition.
Blank‑Verse Construction
Count syllables (10) → Mark stresses (unstressed‑stressed pattern) → Adjust for natural speech (elisions, run‑ons) → Vary rhythm for emotion (e.g., Hamlet).
🔍 Key Comparisons
Comedies vs. Tragedies –
Comedies: Multiple love plots, happy endings, festive tone.
Tragedies: Central fatal flaw, downfall, somber tone, often ends in death.
Quarto vs. Folio –
Quarto: Early, sometimes corrupted, “bad” versions; printed individually.
Folio: Authoritative 1623 collection; edited by Shakespeare’s fellow actors.
Early vs. Late Style –
Early: More regular iambic pentameter, clearer syntax.
Late: Concentrated, rapid, irregular pauses, run‑on lines, elliptical sentences.
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Shakespeare wrote all 38 plays himself.” – Two plays (Two Noble Kinsmen, Pericles) are collaborative; three late romances likely co‑written with Fletcher.
“All sonnets are about a single lover.” – They address two distinct addressees: the “fair youth” and the “dark lady”.
“The Globe burned in 1613 because Shakespeare caused it.” – The fire was accidental; Shakespeare had already retired to Stratford by then.
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Theatre‑Company‑Ownership Loop” – Imagine Shakespeare as both actor and shareholder; his financial stake drives decisions about play selection, venue building (Globe), and winter staging (Blackfriars).
“Verse‑Emotion Gradient” – Visualize blank verse as a straight line; when a character is calm, the line stays smooth; when turmoil arises (e.g., Hamlet’s “To be…”), the line bends, shortens, or spikes—signaling psychological shift.
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Bad Quartos – Not all early quartos are “bad”; some preserve unique scenes (e.g., Hamlet Q1).
Genre‑Blending – Measure for Measure (problem play) mixes comedy’s structure with tragedy’s moral ambiguity; Hamlet is listed both as tragedy and problem play.
Authorship Doubts – Fringe theories (Bacon, Marlowe, Oxford) exist but lack scholarly consensus.
📍 When to Use Which
Identifying a Play’s Genre:
Look for multiple romantic entanglements & resolution → Comedy.
Look for historical figure & national/political focus → History.
Look for tragic flaw & catastrophic ending → Tragedy.
Mixed tone & moral ambiguity → Problem play.
Choosing Textual Source for Study:
For performance practice → Use Quarto (closer to actors’ scripts).
For canonical citation → Use Folio (official 1623 text).
👀 Patterns to Recognize
Opening “Prologue” + “Chorus” → Folio/early tragedy (e.g., Henry V).
“All’s well that ends well” motif → Romantic comedies (e.g., Much Ado About Nothing).
Repetition of “the play’s the thing” → Metatheatrical moments (common in late romances).
Iambic pentameter with occasional trochaic foot → Indicates heightened emotion or character disturbance.
🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “Shakespeare wrote The Two Noble Kinsmen alone.” – Wrong; it’s a collaboration with Fletcher.
Distractor: “All of Shakespeare’s plays were printed first in the First Folio.” – Incorrect; many appeared in earlier quartos.
Distractor: “The Globe was built in 1603.” – Actually built in 1599; 1603 is when the company became the King’s Men.
Distractor: “‘Bad quartos’ are inferior because Shakespeare disliked them.” – They are called “bad” due to textual corruption, not authorial intent.
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