Summer Shakespeare I

Bruce A. McMenomy, Ph.D. for Scholars Online
2024: Wednesdays, 1:00-3:00 p.m. Eastern Time
June 12 - Aug. 21

June 12:
A Midsummer Night's Dream
Conventions

June 19:
Romeo and Juliet
Language

June 26:
The Taming of the Shrew
Themes

July 10:
Richard II
History

July 17:
As You Like It
Comedy

July 24:
Julius Caesar
Tragedy

July 31:
The Merchant of Venice
Structure

August 7:
King Lear
Symbolism

August 14:
Twelfth Night
Ambiguity

Course Overview

Throughout five years of course offerings in English, the Scholars Online program covers a fair amount of Shakespeare. A student who has taken World Literature, English Literature, and Senior English will have read:

I have not yet figured out a legitimate way of incorporating Shakespeare into either Western Literature to Dante or American Literature. Failing some major historical upheaval, I suspect that this will not change.

A student can therefore read eight or nine plays in the normal course of academic-year classes. While this certainly represents a good deal more Shakespeare than the average high school student will study formally, still, as Harold Bloom argues, Shakespeare has a unique place at the center of the Western literary canon, and it is nearly impossible to get too much of him.

Accordingly, this course, being offered for the tenth time in 2024, is designed to fill in some of the larger gaps in our Shakespeare offerings. We will cover, at the rate of one per week, nine more major plays, thus doubling the number a student has before college. Of course, at this pace, we cannot even pretend to be exhaustive — it’s intended to be a fun course in any case. But I am hoping that it will foster a cheerful familiarity with Shakespeare, and an awareness of the shape of his corpus as a whole. Taken together with the nine above, this will bring the student’s coverage to eighteen plays — more than half of Shakespeare’s total production. (Summer Shakespeare II is available to provide another ten plays, bringing the total to twenty-eight. Summer Shakespeare III completes the canon.)

This course will include:

Because time is at a premium during the summer, and we would like to accomplish as much as we possibly can, I’d like to hit the ground running with a play discussion the first week. Therefore, do not delay to enroll, and get the books as soon as possible.