Bard College

Just before Thanksgiving break in 2020, we began our expedition into the works and days of Shakespeare (a course we called Bard College)

We began with a live performance (via Zoom) of an interlocking set of scenes, monologues, and sonnets by Shakespeare, selected and performed by Sanda Moore Coleman and Mr. Coleman.

We've explored the power of Shakespeare's language as experienced in a number of scenes and monologues, and then within the whole of Much Ado About Nothing (via a fantastic Globe Theatre Live performance from 2012, featuring Eve Best and Charles Edwards) and A Midsummer Night's Dream, a play that is a kind of synthesis of our three previous deep-dives (comedy, the moon, the law), for it is a comedy that is rooted in wonder which features characters who are moonstruck. It is a play that concerns the power of imagination and how that power can inform rationality. It is about the law, even as it is about love.

We also watched professional actors perform scenes and monologues in a workshop setting, via clips from Playing Shakespeare, a mid-1980s BBC series in which the director John Barton and a group of young actors from the Royal Shakespeare Company (including Judy Dench, Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, David Suchet, and Michael Pennington) workshop scenes and monologues in a directed but informal setting. They hold scripts in hand. They wear street clothes. There are few props. And yet each moment is full of life, fully formed, fully charged with meaning. (We recalled what Moliere once said: in theatre "all that's needed is a platform and a passion or two. The climax of this play [Our Town] needs only five square feet of boarding and the passion to know what life means to us.” This brought to mind what Woody Guthrie said about songwriting: "All you need is three chords and the truth.")

We watched different film versions of the same scenes (from Macbeth and from Much Ado) then compared and contrasted them as objectively as possible, using a form that invited observations about language, lighting, staging, costuming, etc.), so that our conclusions, our stated preferences, were based upon evidence.

We also discussed how historical forces are encoded in Shakespeare's works, such as how the climate of fear surrounding the Gunpowder Plot found expression in Macbeth, or how concerns about succession in Elizabethan England were explored in Julius Caesar. We discussed how it is that Shakespeare's works can remain so deeply relevant across time and space.

We studied tools of expression used by Shakespeare--antithesis, anaphora, allusion, imagery, alliteration, assonance, rhythm (including various metrical feet, forms of lines, and kinds of metrical substitutions)β€”, a study that helped us more fully inhabit and understand character, theme, and meaning within a wealth of monologues and scenes and within a play as a whole.

We used these same tools to help shed light upon the works of Martin Luther King, Jr. on MLK Day, when we watched and read and studied his "I Have A Dream" and "I've Been to the Mountaintop" speeches, as well as his sermon "The Drum-Major Instinct." We also read and saw Robert Kennedy's speech, which he delivered in the wake of MLK's assassination, and in which he quotes the Greek tragedian Sophocles in order to offer coordinates of compassion to his hearers.

Those same tools of expression allowed us to more fully inhabit the songs, speeches, and poems that composed the Inauguration, which we watched live on January 20, 2021. We analyzed certain works in real-time, and then made something of that inquiry: Ian, for instance, drew the roots of allusion embedded in Biden's speech, so that we could see the life of Lincoln and Winthrop and Isaiah and Langford Hughes that helped animate the meaning of the speech. We did the same kind of work with the Amanda Gorman's inaugural poem, "The Hill We Climb."

In analyzing the above works, we employed a tool of thinking, Part/Whole, in which we aimed to tether our analysis of a particular aspect of a piece (such as Gorman's near-exclusive use of first-person plural) to an observation about the meaning of the work as a whole (a theme of unity, for example).

Throughout the past weeks, we also continued our memory work and our creative writing, so that we could internalize these tools of expression. Students memorized and recited Mary Oliver's "White-Eyes" and wrote poems that enacted metrical forms.

(As we worked at understanding the tool of expression of assonance from the inside, we wound up inventing our own language, in which only the vowel sounds of words are spoken. Oliver dubbed the language Lag, since its sound is like that of someone cutting in and out on Zoom.)

Along the way, we've continued our practice of outlining (students outlined the tools of expression, then outlined the use of some of those tools within certain works) and continued our practice of analytical paragraphing (using the same form that we used in Comedy Class and Law School: Claim / Cite / Quote / Explain).

During project week, in addition to selecting, analyzing, and performing Shakespearean monologues, students were asked to make visible one or more tools of expression. The gallery below includes a sampling of what the students made of that inquiry, including a sculpture of Plato and Aristotle from Raphael's The School of Athens and a fashion show of metrical feet.

 

β€œAll Is Mended,”

an interlocking set of scenes, monologues, and sonnets by Shakespeare, selected and performed by Sanda Moore Coleman and Mr. Coleman.

 
 
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