This course introduces and explores William Shakespeare’s classic comedy, Twelfth Night. Interviews with actors who appeared in the Colorado Shakespeare Festival’s 2019 production of Twelfth Night, as well as lectures by scholars and theater professionals who work and teach at the University of Colorado Boulder, offer students insight into Shakespeare’s artistic vision and its applications. Exploring Shakespeare’s language, his characters, his humor and his world view, the lectures, interviews, and interactive learning experiences that make up this class will help students comprehend the power of Shakespearean comedy and the abiding appeal of Twelfth Night for its original audience and our contemporary moment. You'll explore the relationship between comedy and tragedy, the conflict inherent in desire, and the ways Shakespeare's words and works engaged his community, and yours.
This course strives to be of interest to multiple audiences, but we think it may particularly appeal to...
* Shakespeare enthusiasts and the Shakespeare curious in all walks of life
* Actors, theater practitioners, and teachers of Shakespeare everywhere
* Secondary school and college students interested in expanding their studies of Shakespeare
* Interested readers with little or no familiarity with Shakespeare
This module provides an overview of Twelfth Night and introduces the play by exploring key aspects of the world it imagines. The interviews, lectures, and faculty roundtable explore the carnivalesque quality of the play, its humor, its language, and significant historical contexts. Dialogues with scholars and theater practitioners provide multiple perspectives on the nature of this narrative universe.
1.2 Twelfth Night: A First Introduction and Overview•9 minutes
1.3 Introduction of Tim Orr and Amanda Giguere•1 minute
1.4 Design and Directorial Choices as a Way of Understanding the "World of the Play"•13 minutes
1.5 Performance History of Twelfth Night•7 minutes
1.6 Feste and the World of the Play•5 minutes
1.7 Feste and the Comic World of Twelfth Night•9 minutes
1.8 Roundtable: Act 3 Scene 1 - Feste and Cesario•14 minutes
6 readings•Total 111 minutes
Course Updates and Accessibility Support•1 minute
Reading and Engaging with Twelfth Night •30 minutes
Applied Shakespeare at CU Boulder•10 minutes
Annotation Project Overview and Full Description•20 minutes
Using Hypothes.is for web-based social annotation of texts•20 minutes
Annotation Project: Step 1•30 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Twelfth Night and the World of the Play Module Quiz•30 minutes
1 app item•Total 30 minutes
Practice with Hypothes.is Web Annotation•30 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 15 minutes
Introduction, your Shakespeare story•15 minutes
1 plugin•Total 30 minutes
Twelfth Night, Act 3 Scene 1•30 minutes
Desire, Identity, and Chaos in Twelfth Night
Module 2•4 hours to complete
Module details
This module focuses on Shakespeare’s understanding of human psychology, especially the experience of desire. Twelfth Night dramatizes the folly associated with love, and also—as with all of Shakespeare’s comedies—revels in the tumult love creates. The world depicted in this play is characterized by a kind of collective madness that grows ever more chaotic as it progresses.
2.1 Overview of Themes of Desire and Identity•2 minutes
2.2 Faculty Roundtable: Twelfth Night Act 1, Scene 1 - Orsino's Desire, Melancholy and Desire•15 minutes
2.3 Disguises, Identity, and the Play of Desire•8 minutes
2.4 Viola - Survival, Disguise, and Love•15 minutes
2.5 Olivia: Identity and Desire•9 minutes
2.6 Faculty Roundtable: Twelfth Night Act 1, Scene 5 - Olivia, Viola, and the Power of Desire•21 minutes
2.7 Sebastian and Antonio•10 minutes
2 readings•Total 70 minutes
Review Twelfth Night Acts 1 and 2•10 minutes
Annotation Project Step 2•60 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Desire, Identity, and Chaos Module Quiz•30 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Share your Annotation Project Step 2 annotations-in-progress•10 minutes
2 plugins•Total 60 minutes
Twelfth Night, Act 1, Scene 1•30 minutes
Twelfth Night, Act 1 Scene 5•30 minutes
Class, Comedy, and Conflict in Twelfth Night
Module 3•5 hours to complete
Module details
Module Three emphasizes how assumptions about social order fuel conflict in the play. The previous module emphasized the humor that derives from desire, but also the awareness of grimmer aspects of desire. The lectures, interviews and roundtables in this unit focus on desires that are not allowed. Desire creates conflict. This aspect of Twelfth Night is most obviously evident in the interactions among a number of the play’s minor characters, especially the conflict between Malvolio, on the one hand, and Sir Toby and Maria, on the other.
3.1 Addressing Minor Characters; How Desire Leads to Class Conflict•1 minute
3.2 Malvolio: Order and Aspiration•13 minutes
3.3 Sir Toby Belch's Worldview•9 minutes
3.4 Maria on Class•10 minutes
3.5 Roundtable Seminar Introduction•1 minute
3.6 Roundtable Act 2, Scenes 3 & 5 - Confrontation of Malvolio and Sir Toby•19 minutes
3.7 Religion and the Punishment of Malvolio•11 minutes
3 readings•Total 55 minutes
Review Twelfth Night Acts 3, 4, and 5 •10 minutes
Introduction to Lecture 3.7•15 minutes
Annotation Project Step 3•30 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Class, Comedy, and Conflict Module Quiz•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Annotation Project Deliverables•60 minutes
1 app item•Total 60 minutes
Annotate Twelfth Night Using Hypothes.is!•60 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 15 minutes
Reflecting on the annotation project•15 minutes
1 plugin•Total 30 minutes
Twelfth Night, Act 2, Scene 3•30 minutes
Twelfth Night and the Limits of Comedy
Module 4•3 hours to complete
Module details
This module focuses on how Shakespeare’s play both conforms to the expectations of the comedic genre and challenges the genre’s conventions. Such tensions are especially evident in the play’s resolution. Even as the play provides the marriages expected at the end of a comedy, the play also draws attention to characters excluded from such happy endings. Twelfth Night derives great humor from the chaos prompted by love; but the conflicts unleashed in the course of the play’s action cannot all be resolved by the marriage of some members of the community.
What's included
7 videos2 readings1 assignment1 plugin
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 60 minutes
4.1 Module Introduction•2 minutes
4.2 On Resolution and Reunion - Discussing the Play's Conclusion•10 minutes
4.3 Roundtable Act 5, Scene 1 - Play's Conclusion•17 minutes
4.4 Twelfth Night and Comedy's Tragic Potentials•6 minutes
4.5 Malvolio and Revenge•9 minutes
4.6 Feste - Perspectives on Malvolio•9 minutes
4.7 Concluding Twelfth Night: "We'll Strive to Please You Every Day"•8 minutes
2 readings•Total 30 minutes
Review Twelfth Night Act 5•10 minutes
Creative Application Project•20 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Limits of Comedy Module Quiz•30 minutes
1 plugin•Total 30 minutes
Twelfth Night, Act 5, Scene 1•30 minutes
Applied Shakespeare in the Community: A Case Study
Module 5•4 hours to complete
Module details
In this module we will briefly explore a case study of how Twelfth Night has been re-interpreted and repurposed by the Colorado Shakespeare Festival’s Shakespeare in the Schools project. Module five examines how Malvolio's story offers a platform for conversations relevant to our own day about communities and violence.
5.2 Shakespeare in the Schools: Anti-Bullying Campaign•11 minutes
5.5 Course Conclusion•1 minute
4 readings•Total 140 minutes
5.3 Written Resources for Shakespeare in the Schools Anti-Bullying Effort•60 minutes
5.4 Scholarship and Practice of Applied Shakespeare•60 minutes
5.4.1 Bibliography of Resources for Applied Shakespeare•10 minutes
5.4.2 CU Boulder’s Applied Shakespeare Graduate Certificate•10 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Creative Application Project•60 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 15 minutes
Applied to what? Localizing Shakespeare in your community•15 minutes
OPTIONAL BONUS MODULE: Optional Full-Length Actor Interviews
Module 6•5 hours to complete
Module details
In this optional bonus module, we include for you the full-length Twelfth Night actor interviews in case you are interested in digging deeper into these discussions. Reviewing these videos isn't a course requirement, but we wanted to include them for your benefit.
What's included
8 videos1 reading
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 317 minutes
Amanda Giguere -Dramaturge•28 minutes
Rinde Eckert - Feste•46 minutes
Garreth Saxe - Malvolio•35 minutes
Jessica Robblee - Lady Olivia•47 minutes
Robert Sicular - Sir Toby Belch•29 minutes
Amber Scales - Viola/Cesario•46 minutes
Tim Orr - Director•56 minutes
Emma Messenger - Maria•30 minutes
1 reading•Total 3 minutes
Optional Additional Video Content•3 minutes
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The course itself is great, however it fails on the activities where we need to evaluate colleagues and receive this evaluation. There is no evaluation available on time.
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