Friday, April 4, 2014

Ophelia Project Daniel Fiallo,Felipe Caballero, and Jorge Villamizar

1,2.Character Interactions


Act I Scene iii
In this scene Ophelia interacts with Polonius and and Laertes. Both of these interactions have to do with a talk about Hamlet and how he is mad and not really in love with Ophelia.We learn that Ophelia has doubts about Hamlet love.

Act II Scene i
                In this scene Ophelia interacts with Polonius. Ophelia starts a conversation with Polonius and tells him that Hamlet acted crazy after she told him that she would not accept letters or visits from him. Polonius acts out and tells her that he should have paid more attention to Hamlet and that he will talk to the king. We learn in this scene that Ophelia starts thinking that Hamlet is in fact crazy

Act III Scene i
                In this scene Ophelia has an interaction with Hamlet. Ophelia talks to Hamlet about returning the presents that were given to her by Hamlet. Hamlet  In this scene also reveals to Ophelia that he was never in love with her, that he was just mad, crazy and vengeful. We learn in this scene that Ophelia accepts that Hamlet is mad.

Act III Scene ii
                In this scene Ophelia interacts with Hamlet during the showing of a play. Hamlets start out a conversation that makes a reference to sex but Ophelia has nothing to say to that. As they are watching the play Ophelia starts asking Hamlet questions about the play etc. She starts to figure out what the play represents.We learn in this scene that Ophelia  starts focusing more on Hamlets intentions for vengance.

Act IV scene v
                In this scene Ophelia interacts with King Claudius and Queen Gertrude. Ophelia is called upon and just starts singing songs while talking to Gertrude. Claudius then arrives at the scene and explains that Ophelia’s father’s death (Polonius) has driven Ophelia mad/crazy.We learn that Ophelia has gone craz because her father was killed.

Act IV scene vii
                In this act Ophelia interacts with all the major characters in the story. The reason why this is possible is because she dies off stage and news of her death is spread .We  learn in this scene that Ophelia has died possibly form suicide.


3.Images



4.Quotes

Act 1 Scene 3: "Tis in my memory lock`d, and you yourself shall keep the key of it" (pg 22)

Act 2 Scene 1: "No, my good lord, but as you did command, I did repel his letters and denied his access to me. (pg 40)

Act 3 Scene 1: "Could beauty, my lord, have better commerce than with honesty?" (pg 69)

Act 3 Scene 2: "Will´a tell us what this show meant?" (pg 79)

Act 4 Scene 5: "I hope all be well. We must be patient. But I cannot choose but weep to think they would lay him ith cold ground." (pg 115)

Act 4 Scene 7: "One woe doth tread upon another`s heel, so fast they follow. Your sister`s drown`d, Laertes." (pg 127)

5. Summarative Paragraph

Ophelia is shown as an exemplary daughter and woman all through the start of the play. She is even committed to obeying the Lord, and acknowledging all of his actions. Ophelia’s weakness comes from her personality; she is used to receive orders and following established routines. This makes her an easy target for Polonius and allows him to induce her to act and allow King Claudius to spy on Hamlet. As long as Ophelia is single she will be bound to live alongside her father, and under all of his doings and rules. In many ways, Ophelia is restricted in a handful of aspects that make her live impossible and through many fortuitous
actions, she eventually snapped. In many ways, she became a good girl, gone bad

Monday, February 24, 2014

William Shakespeare Project Topic 2


Research Project

Topic 2: Research British History 1550-1650. What was going on in Britain during the time just before, during and just after Shakespeare lived? Who were the rulers? What was the political atmosphere? What were the people concerned about? How did the people live? Answer these kinds of questions in your report.

Britain Before the Birth Of Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was "supposedly" born in 1564 .Thirty years before Shakespeare was born, King Henry VII communalized the succession of the Roman Catholic Church and established the Protestant Church of England. In 1558,six years before Shakespeare’s birth, Elizabeth I attained the British throne.

Rulers Of Britain


  • Queen Elizabeth 1st
  • King James I
  • King James IV
  • Charles I

During Shakespeare

  • It was a period following a time of major religious upheaval in England.
  • Queen Elizabeth established the Church of England.
  • During Queen Elizabeth's reign, there was great expansion of trade and exploration England became more important as a world power 
  • In 1588 the English won a big battle against Spain with the defeat of the Spanish Armada later in Shakespears life was lived during the reign of King James I 
  • In 1607 a group of Catholics plotted to blow up parliament with the king and his family but failed. 
  • During James I reign, the colony of Jamestown was established in America King Scotland, and later England and Ireland 
  •  His mother was Mary, Queen of Scots, and is father, Darnley, was murdered. 
  • Mary was forced to abdicate the throne in 1567. 
  • James didn’t take power until 1581 because he was too young.
  • Became king of England in 1603, after death the of Elizabeth I  King James create another version of the bible.
  • The gunpowder plot took place under his rule, which was an attempt to blow up both James and parliament, and involved the iconic Guy Fawkes Ended a war with Spain that had dragged on for quite some time. 
  • People where concerned about short life spans, The Spanish Armada ,riots and lack of medicine.
  • Bubonic Plague

After Shakespeare

  • In 1625 after Shakespeare's life, Charles I reigned over England and the English Civil War between King and Parliament occurred .
  • Daughter of infamous Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. Her mother was beheaded while she was an infant.
  • Mary, Elizabeth’s half-sister, succeeded the throne and imprisoned her because of their difference in religion. Mary was Catholic, and Elizabeth was protestant.
  • Mary dies and Elizabeth takes the throne in 1558
  • Established Protestant Christianity over Catholicism
  • Her cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots, was exiled to England, and became a threat to the throne. Elizabeth imprisoned Mary for nearly 20 years until evidence of her involvement in a plot to take the throne surfaced, and she was executed
  • Defeated Spanish Armada after they tried to attack England and restore Catholicism
    She never married, and eventually died in 1603, to be succeeded by James I.

How Did The People Live

Before

  • Church was a powerful political entity
  • Church of England (Henry)
  • Work was mostly rural
  • Instead of large urban centers there were lots of small communities

During

  • Catholicism regained strength
  • Monarchy suffered legitimacy issues
  • Overpopulated Cities
  • Sanitary Issues

After:

  • Urban Growth caused bigger higiene problems, and created subpar living conditions
  • Gin Moonshining
  • New Diseases caused the Medical Scene to improve

Works Cited:

-Lee, C. H. "Atlas Of British Social And Economic History Since C. 1700 (Book)." Economic History Review 43.1 (1990): 142-143.Business Source Elite. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.
-Trim, David J.B. "The Context Of War And Violence In Sixteenth-Century English Society." Journal Of Early Modern History 3.3 (1999): 233. Academic Search Premier. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.

 Posted by: Jorge Villamizar, Daniel Fiallo, Felipe Caballero, and Tiffany May

           

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Character Descriptions

Hamlet:

  • Prince of Denmark
  • Son of Gertrude
  • Nephew of Claudius
  • Ghost of his dead father acusses Claudius of murder
  • The ghost of his father demands revenge
Polonius

  • King's Counselor
  • Father of Laertes and Ophelia
Ophelia

  • Daughter of Polonius
  • Sister of Laertes
  • Loves Hamlet
Fortinbras

  • Prince of Norway
  • Opposite of Hamlet
  • Fortinbras's uncle has also succeded to his brother's throne
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern

  • Hamlet's Schoolfriends
  • Summoned to court by Claudius (King)
  • King uses them as instruments
Posted by: Jorge Villamizar, Daniel Fiallo, Felipe Caballero, and Tiffany May