2. Folger Shakespeare Library
Located on Capitol Hill in
Washington, DC.
Home to the world’s
largest and finest
collection of Shakespeare
materials and major
collections of other rare
Renaissance books,
manuscripts, and works
of art
10. First Folio 1623
Contains 36 plays
Published 7 years after Shakespeare died
Half of the plays had not previously been
published, including Macbeth, Twelfth
Night and The Taming of the Shrew
Only 232 copies of the book, which sold for
20 shillings (about $200 in 1623) are thought
to exist.
Folger Shakespeare Library has 82 copies
Kodama Library at Meisei University in
Tokyo has 12
17. Folger Making Shakespeare Editions Text Available Free
for Non-Commercial Use
"The most widely used electronic version of the plays—the Globe
Edition (1864)—is over a century old, and I believe the Folger
Editions will take its place as the electronic edition of record for
Shakespeare's plays.“ — Michael Witmore
Director, Folger Shakespeare Library
33. It is more important to get
kids to like Shakespeare
than it is to get them to
understand every word.
34. The best way to get kids to
like Shakespeare is by
getting them to perform
Shakespeare.
35. Performing Shakespeare does not
mean having students sit at their
desks reading out loud, or having
students stand in front of the room
reading out loud, or the teacher
acting out scenes for the class.
36. Acting out a scene is a
form of close reading on
your feet.
37. Sometimes it is better to
do just part of a play
rather than the whole
play.
44. Designing Globe Theaters out of sugar
cubes and Popsicle sticks, making
Elizabethan newspapers, designing
costumes, doing a scavenger hunt on the
Internet, or doing a report on Elizabethan
sanitary conditions has nothing to do with
a student’s appreciation of Shakespeare’s
language.
45.
46.
47.
48. O
int. Expressing (according to intonation) surprise,
frustration, discomfort, longing, disappointment,
sorrow, relief, hesitation, etc.
Used mainly in imperative, optative, or exclamatory
sentences or phrases, as in O take me back again!,
O for another glimpse of it!, O the pity of it!, O
dear!; often also emphatically in O yes, O no, O
indeed, etc
The Oxford English Dictionary
50. Tone
A particular quality, pitch, modulation,
or inflexion of the voice expressing or
indicating affirmation, interrogation,
hesitation, decision, or some feeling
or emotion; vocal expression.
--The Oxford English Dictionary
63. Stress
Relative loudness or force of vocal utterance; a
greater degree of vocal force characterizing one
syllable as compared with other syllables of the
word, or one part of a syllable as compared with
the rest; stress-accent. Also, superior loudness of
voice as a means of emphasizing one or more of
the words of a sentence more than the rest.
Oxford English Dictionary