Welcome to
The Shakespeare Project, a website developed and primarily maintained for
undergraduate study of the plays of William Shakespeare. The site
is organized in four groups: Group One collects in two files
course notes for those plays and poems I teach in my classes at Grand Rapids
Community College and Western Michigan University; it also features a research
bibliography, "Sources for Research," which is subdivided into fifty
Shakespearean research topics; a "Teaching Shakespeare" file for those
interested in teaching Shakespeare at the secondary level; and a "Shakespeare
and Other" file with overview of marginalized characters and their representation
in the plays. Group Two features links to major theatres and
theatre scenes, links to other Shakespeare websites, a link to a Shakespeare
Tour I have led in the past, and examples of first and second year Shakespeare
courses at a variety of U.S. colleges. Group Three features selections
from Elizabethan and Jacobean source essays; although still incomplete,
the selections here include important prose documents which are currently
out of print or unavailable to students in colleges with smaller library
databases. Group Four, also incomplete, features some contemporary
essays bearing on Shakespearean issues; I welcome submissions from post-graduate
scholars whose work reflects the best postmodern scholarship. Ideally,
these essays should reflect "unusual" areas of Shakespearean scholarship,
and the purpose of including them here is to give undergraduate students
more sources from which to draw for their researched essays. So here's
to the Swan of Avon, and to all those students who find their way to this
site, hungry for ways to live in his plays.
Peace! David Cope
Content of This Site:
Group One: COURSE MATERIALS
Group Two: LINKS and CONNECTIONS
Group Three: ELIZABETHAN
and JACOBEAN SOURCE ESSAYS
Group Four: CONTEMPORARY
ESSAYS
* To view/Print the PDF documents you will need the
Adobe Acrobat Reader.
If you do not have the reader already loaded on your system, please
download it by clicking on the Icon below. Once you have the reader downloaded,
you can open to view and/or print the Course above.
GROUP ONE: COURSE MATERIALS
Course Notes#1: Background, Plays to 1599 (54pg document)
Word Document
*
PDF file
Course Notes#2: Plays 1600-1611/Sonnets (59pg document)
Word Document
*
PDF file coming soon
Sources for Research
Microsoft
Word Document
*
PDF
File coming soon
Teaching Shakespeare
Microsoft
Word Document
*
PDF
File coming soon
Shakespeare and "Other"
Microsoft
Word Document
*
PDF
file coming soon
Back to Top Menu
GROUP TWO: LINKS and CONNECTIONS
English
293: Shakespeare in Performance
Links
to Reliable Shakespeare Sources
Links to Shakespeare Theatre Guides
Shakespeare
Courses at other Colleges and Universities
Back to Top Menu
GROUP THREE: ELIZABETHAN and JACOBEAN
SOURCE ESSAYS
George Puttenham: The Arte of English Poesie (1589)
(17 pg. document)
Microsoft
Word Document
*
PDF
file coming soon
Thomas Dekker: The Wonderful Year (1603) and The
Gull's Hornbook (1609) (30 pg. document)
Microsoft
Word Document
*
PDF
file coming soon
Puritan Attacks on the Theatre
Microsoft
Word Document
PDF
file coming soon
Defenses of theTheatre
Microsoft
Word Document
PDF
file coming soon
Back to Top Menu
GROUP FOUR: CONTEMPORARY ESSAYS
Dr. Henry Seaton: "All-licensed fool"; all licensed film:
Akira Kurosawa's Ran (46 pg document)
Word
Document
*
PDF
file coming soon
David Cope: Cross Dressing with a Difference (14 pg
document)
Word Document
*
PDF file
David Cope: Shakespeare/Melville (15 pg document)
Word Document
*
PDF file
David Cope: Censorship and Representation in the Stuart Era:
Three Roman Plays (26 pg document)
Word
Document
*
PDF File
David Cope: Poetomachia and the Early Jonson: The Aesthetics
of Topical Satire (38 pg document)
Word Document
*
PDF File
David Cope: Marlowe's Tamburlaine: Unsettling Audience
Loyalties (18 pg document)
Word
Document
*
PDF File
Back to Top Menu
Send Comments to dcope@grcc.cc.mi.us