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amimetobios

New for 2023: Victorian Poetry Scroll back for previous courses on Shakespeare, Eighteenth Century Poetry, Close Reading, Various film genres, Film and Philosophy, the Western Canon, Early Romantics, 17th Century Poetry, etc.
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Episodes

Advanced Shakespeare 19 Friday 3-27-20 Act I concluded

Cleopatra's character. Antony and Cleopatra as, essentially, the one life-affirming tragedy: the tragedy that does what comedies do. "Strong as death is love." Versions of the verb "to bear." Jokes at Mardian's expense. Apostrophes to Antony. How they are together in separation. What I didn't quite say is that Rome and Alexandria are established as social spaces, while Antony is between them and so gone during the period of his transition from one to the other,. More uses of the word where : Whe...

Mar 27, 20201 hr 21 minEp. 154

Advanced Shakespeare 18 Friday 3-20-20 Antony and Cleopatra Act I continued

We continue our close reading, especially of the clash of mood or tone between characters in scenes 2 and 3, in the way Shakespeare is representing people trying to set the dominant mood of the scene: Antony and Enobarbus, and then Antony and Cleopatra. Some attention to the extremely subtle foreshadowing and creation of perspective in those scenes. Similarities and differences between Antony's relation to Enobarbus and his relation to Cleopatra.

Mar 22, 20201 hr 13 minEp. 153

Advanced Shakespeare 16 Being Mark Antony

First class on Zoom. I recorded the class as though in class but I was sitting at my computer. That means there's more me and less them, alas. Anyhow: we talked about being Mark Antony (cf. Being John Malkovich ) and the odd phrase "an Antony." Comparing that to the king's two bodies. And we talked about time frames again: how Octavian is always the age he is at the beginning, and Antony and Cleopatra always the ages they are at the end.

Mar 14, 20201 hr 18 minEp. 151

Advanced Shakespeare 15, 3-10-20 Ages of the characters -- Shakespeare's temporal preferences

After a 15 minute discussion of Covid-19 (not recorded here) we talk about the actual ages of various characters, and the ages that Shakespeare wanted them to be: not only in A & C but in Richard II , 1 Henry IV and the romances: the idea that you can go from the start of adulthood (Octavius) to the maturity that makes you fit for tragedy and old enough to have lived long enough (Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra) within 16-18 years or so. Shakespeare's highly skillful stage setting in scene 1. ...

Mar 11, 202051 minEp. 150

Advanced Shakespeare 14 3/6/2020 Opening of Antony and Cleopatra

We finally really begin Antony and Cleopatra , discussing Plutarch's interest in character, and Shakespeare's, and what makes a tragic character interesting since we know what the plot will be. Aristotle on pity and terror again: usually the protagonist or main is someone innocent or at worst someone like ourselves: not so in Macbeth . After which we start analyzing the opening scene, with comparisons to Lear and to Hamlet as well (on the quantification of love). Many corny jokes....

Mar 08, 20201 hr 15 minEp. 149

Advanced Shakespeare 13 - March 3, 2020 Last class on Macbeth: sonnets and then "My way of life is fallen...."

A class where we finally talk about the whole soliloquy, with which I am obsessed, in which Macbeth calls or Seyton and considers how his way of life is fallen into the sere, the yellow leaf." We get there by means of Sonnet 12, but that means talking about the sonnets: first the nature of sonnet sequences from Petrarch through Wyatt to Sidney and Shakespeare, then of course (via Wyatt) about Tottel's miscellany, and then a discussion of Sonnet 73 and its echoes of Macbeth's soliloquy, and ultim...

Mar 04, 20201 hr 17 minEp. 148

Advanced Shakespeare 12 Feb 28 2020 Poetic form and Yes Fear ShakeFear

A class which turned out to be a lot on verse drama, and how and why it works, partly based on Evelyn Tribble's ideas about "fluent forgetting" (which I mentioned before) in her book Cognition in the Globe . Lots of stuff on proto-Indo-European and on how poetic lines work: "loose onsets, strict endings." How Shakespeare makes us focus on particular words but also justifies that focus. Hint: rhyme. We finally get to talking about 5.3, and to Shakespeare's bad Dad pun on Macbeth's refusal to "sha...

Feb 29, 20201 hr 15 minEp. 147

Advanced Shakespeare 11 2/25/20 Interiorizing time

A class which first is about Protestantism and Catholicism in Shakespeare, and the idea in Protestantism that theological issues take on a psychological air. That is, they are interiorized. Then a digressive account of time in Shakespeare (and many others, including Ashbery and Kafka), with the idea being that as you get older -- as the Macbeths get older -- time is interiorized.

Feb 25, 20201 hr 7 minEp. 146

Advanced Shakespeare 10 Class of 2/14/20

A class on doubling, literal and metaphorical, e.g. Lady Macbeth and Lady Macduff, Hecate, etc. The meaning of doubling. The conglomeration and dissolution of social groups. Simmel (of course!) on spatial relations as both the condition and the symbol of human relations. The quickness of friends (in anticipation of Antony and Cleopatra ). Miscellaneous digressions, not all my fault.

Feb 18, 20201 hr 17 minEp. 145

Advanced Shakespeare 9 2/11/20: Remorse and repentance

We start with Coleridge's insight (followed by Bloom) that Macbeth confuses his own pangs of conscience with imaginative fear. Then some discussion of remorse vs. repentance as analogous to that confusion. A couple of jokes, and then a close reading of the line "Which of you have done this" when Macbeth sees Banquo.

Feb 12, 20201 hr 21 minEp. 144

Advanced Shakespeare 8 2/7/20 Being a character and daemonization

A class I actually liked some of: on daemonization (Lionel Abel's term in his article "Daemons true and false") and character. How the most practical matters of representing character on stage (what we hear about Macbeth vs. what we see) give insight into the deepest existential-psychological. This is me essentially trying to turn aspects of Macbeth into L'attente l'oubli . With digressions and a digression on digressions.

Feb 07, 20201 hr 18 minEp. 143

Advanced Shakespeare 7 2/4/20 Friendship and love in Shakespeare

A student brings up Banquo and tries to relate the line of kings to the edge of doom to Dante's Inferno. Which leads to a discussion of Banquo and the more general tension in Shakespeare between friendship and love, solved in the comedies but always part of the loss in the tragedies. Considerations of this issue in Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Hamlet, King Lear , and of course Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra .

Feb 05, 20201 hr 14 minEp. 142

Advanced Shakespeare 6 1/31/20 -- witches and soothsayers and messengers o my

Mainly about witches: Reginald Scott's skepticism, James's motivated belief in them, the King's touch, the relation of witches to the soothsayer in A&C (vs. the one in JC), and some attention (again, as in other courses) to Dan Decker's Anatomy of a Screenplay and the insights it affords into Shakespeare's construction of scenes: the way soothsayers and messengers are similar and the way they differ. At the end a brief consideration of what De Quincey means by sympathy.

Feb 01, 20201 hr 17 minEp. 141

Advanced Shakespeare 5 1/28/20 De Quincey Knocking at the Gate

Elements in Macbeth that were more or less likely to come from elsewhere. Who played whom. Robert Armin (and Will Kemp). Johnson on whether the reference to Antony and Cleopatra (Macbeth's genius overmatched by Banquo's as Antony's is by Caesar) is an interpolation. De Quincey on the knocking at the gate, and the effect that the juxtaposition of scenes has.

Jan 29, 20201 hr 18 minEp. 140

Advanced Shakespeare 2 1/17/20

Why editors change the originals -- canonical words and lines, as we now know them. Theobald on Autumn/Antonie. Theobald on "this bank and shoal of time"

Jan 19, 20201 hr 17 minEp. 137

Early Romantics XXVII 5-10-19 LONG Last class on Coleridge

A long class, chiefly on Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Kubla Kahn . I think I realized some things about the latter worth realizing. (N.B. I repeat a mistake I made earlier: the apparently supernatural episode that isn't isn't in "Michael," as I misremembered, but in "Peter Bell.")

May 11, 20192 hr 27 minEp. 134

Early Romantics XXVI Climbing Mt. Snowdon in Prelude XIII

We complete our discussion of the Prelude by looking at the Snowdon scene in Book XIII, with a lot of comparison to the unfortunate and enfeebling revisions Wordsworth made in Book XIV of the 1850 version. One student reads Oppen's "The Forms of Love" as a kind of pendant to the Snowdon scene. I notice a bunch of things that I don't think I ever did before a connection to King Lear for example, and something about Wordsworth's prosody in the 1805 version....

May 04, 20191 hr 18 minEp. 133

Imagining Money XXXV Thurs 4-18-19 maguffins and the management of longing

A kind of culmination of the material on maguffins, loss aversion, and the management of longing. The sunk costs of antes. The symbolic value of the last cigarette before you quit. That last cigarette being a kind of maguffin which allows for making it satisfy both the desire to smoke and the desire to quit.

Apr 19, 201949 minEp. 129

Early Romantics XXIV Wednesday 4-17-19

A lot of stuff on rhyming, on emic and etic understanding, on phonemes, before we finally get back to Wordsworth, in particular Simplon Pass and what follows: the strange melancholy mansion they stay in; then the Winander Boy: all about estrangement from nature, and being at home in that estrangement, at home in homelessness.

Apr 18, 20191 hr 17 minEp. 128

Imagining Money XXXIV Wed 4-17-19 Stories of gambling

Narrating gambling. Getting the benefits of the breaks. Kinds of gambling narratives: present tense as you're playing and presenting yourself to the other agonists, and past tense: stories of loss.

Apr 17, 201945 minEp. 127

Early Romantics XXIII Monday 4-15-19 Home and homelessness

Powerful anticlimaxes. How being estranged from childhood, and then recognizing that childhood is already the beginning of estrangement, is to achieve the destiny of being at home in homelessness. [Wild turkey flies into a window across the quad and freaks us all out, one way or another.] Mention of Frankenstein. Some of Book VI of The Prelude .

Apr 16, 20191 hr 17 minEp. 126

Imagining Money XXXIII Mon 4-15-19 How endings shape desires

A class -- since no one is keeping up with the reading, to put it mildly -- on the effect that endings have on our desires for narrative. The way endings turn all preferences into short term ones, whereas with the whole novel, movie, epic, series to go, long term preferences will tend to clash more with short term ones. This is (though I don't mention him in the class) one of the ways that convergence works, e.g. in Dan Decker's Anatomy of the Screenplay.

Apr 15, 201952 minEp. 125

Imagining Money XXXII Loss aversion - Thaler

Money offer on the table when we came in! Loss aversion -- it depends how you present things, as Thaler et al show. Medical versions. A brief introduction to Bayesianism and why MD's need to learn some Bayesean analysis. Brandeis's plan to sell its art collection and the "endowment effect." Wins above replacement.

Apr 12, 201952 minEp. 124
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