Saturday, August 14, 2010

'Hamlet' musings

Students can find the concept of a script being 'read' in many different ways a little daunting. One way of approaching this without spending valuable time comparing different productions in full is to compare key scenes or soliloquies. Such comparative clips are already available online and I have found that this keeps the focus tighter with attention on how different perspectives have been achieved while the script remains largely the same. The inherent richness of the play's language enables actors and directors to tease out alternative perspectives of character and situation.

By narrowing the field and the time spent on developing an informed response, students can often gain a greater scope of the interpretive potential that exists. This short clip from RSC version was still long enough for students to recognise the impact of tonal shifts, pausing, emotional delivery and so on on the meaning of what is said. It also helped them utilise metalanguage better by recognising the interplay of pathos, logos and ethos and the use of varied rhetorical devices.

How do you read this interpretation of the lines?

Friday, August 13, 2010

'Hamlet' workshop - 26th August


The 'Hamlet' workshop is not far away and the last touches are being put into the various resources that will be used throughout the day. The teaching approach to this Module is probably the most important factor in covering the content and skills development needed for students to access the upper bands. Oftentimes, too much time is spent on deconstructing the text itself or examining how many different ways it has been produced or criticised.
Student response skills are just as important, particularly in developing a personal interpretive 'voice'. Context, content and construction are typical ways into the text but the real discriminator will always be the ways in which students are able to evaluate the play's language. Fortunately, a great deal of material is available online for students to research in order to arrive at an informed perspective of the play's literary worth.
Here is a taste of 'Hamlet' for you to evaluate.