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  1. #1
    Gangrenous Member Justiciar's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    It seems to be true, sadly enough. They don't seem to realise that kids are put off by Shakespeare because it's educational, not because they're thick. I'm not sure if this is something that happened on an odd occasion that got blown out of proportion by the media or if it's a nation wide occurance, either way..



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    Member Member Avicenna's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by Justiciar
    It seems to be true, sadly enough. They don't seem to realise that kids are put off by Shakespeare because it's educational, not because they're thick. I'm not sure if this is something that happened on an odd occasion that got blown out of proportion by the media or if it's a nation wide occurance, either way..



    I hate this country at times.
    Don't stereotype! I'm not from the UK, but I do follow the UK educational system. Fine, I don't like Shakespeare, because it just doesn't seem to be incredibly interesting and is so tedious having to look up all those funny middle english (it is middle english right?) words. By any means, don't think I'm one of those who hate anything educational. If you believe that, just take a look at my monastery posts. It's just that most other subjects trump Shakespeare in appeal to the wider audience, I guess.
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    zombologist Senior Member doc_bean's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    :sigh:

    Shakespeare wrote popular plays meant to entertain people. He didn't want to make 'high art', so if you want kids to enjoy Shakespeare I'd say it's perfectly valid to update the language. later they might learn in the 'proper' middle English. But it's pure elitism to claim this is the way it's supposed to be. They're plays ! They are meant to be played, in fornt of people who understand what it is about. This isn't avant garde **** where you're not supposed to understand anything.

    This isn't dumbing down Shakespeare per se, it's knocking it back down from its pedastal and giving the stories back to the people.
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    Slain by mafia-implanted bombs Member littlelostboy's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by doc_bean
    :sigh:

    Shakespeare wrote popular plays meant to entertain people. He didn't want to make 'high art', so if you want kids to enjoy Shakespeare I'd say it's perfectly valid to update the language. later they might learn in the 'proper' middle English. But it's pure elitism to claim this is the way it's supposed to be. They're plays ! They are meant to be played, in fornt of people who understand what it is about. This isn't avant garde **** where you're not supposed to understand anything.

    This isn't dumbing down Shakespeare per se, it's knocking it back down from its pedastal and giving the stories back to the people.

    Very true. Plays are plays, they are meant to be perform, that's why its so tedious just to read it. Furthermore, Shakespeare did not just wrote in a language that the commoners could not understand, he wrote in English! At that time, the noble class and the royals still used French and Latin but Shakespeare used English so that the commoners could appreciate the plays as well.
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    Come to daddy Member Geoffrey S's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    If you're going to do Shakespeare, do it properly.

    Anyway, I rather enjoyed Macbeth.
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    Slain by mafia-implanted bombs Member littlelostboy's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Same here. Macbeth is my favourite play.

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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by littlelostboy
    Very true. Plays are plays, they are meant to be perform, that's why its so tedious just to read it. Furthermore, Shakespeare did not just wrote in a language that the commoners could not understand, he wrote in English! At that time, the noble class and the royals still used French and Latin but Shakespeare used English so that the commoners could appreciate the plays as well.
    Thats a myth, everyone spoke English by then.

    I'm sorry but Shakespeare was not the great genius he is portrayed as, if he even existed. He was prolific, he wrote lots of plays and the quality varries greatly.

    That said transaltion shouldn't be in quotation marks and for educational purposes it shouldn't be done because you will lose much of the meaning in the language, at which point you just have the plot. Lets be honest here the plots aren't always great.

    Another thing I dislike about him is the way he treats history, Macbeth was one of Scotland's greatest kings, infact you have to turn the plot on its head to work out what actually happened.
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    Kanto Kanrei Member Marshal Murat's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    The plots are always great.They involve betrayal, a masterful use of dramatic irony, and enough gore to satifsy a 7-year-old who plays gore enhanced wargames.
    I always think that Shakespeare identifies alot of basic human feelings, and then expands them to titanic proportions.
    I enjoy many of his plays, specifically Titus Andronicus, a masterful play full of gore, horror, and insanity.
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    Senior Member Senior Member naut's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by Marshal Murat
    The plots are always great.They involve betrayal, a masterful use of dramatic irony, and enough gore to satifsy a 7-year-old who plays gore enhanced wargames.
    I always think that Shakespeare identifies alot of basic human feelings, and then expands them to titanic proportions.
    I enjoy many of his plays, specifically Titus Andronicus, a masterful play full of gore, horror, and insanity.
    Very true, I prefer Othello though. Simple, but beautiful.
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    Thread killer Member Rodion Romanovich's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by doc_bean
    :sigh:

    Shakespeare wrote popular plays meant to entertain people. He didn't want to make 'high art', so if you want kids to enjoy Shakespeare I'd say it's perfectly valid to update the language. later they might learn in the 'proper' middle English. But it's pure elitism to claim this is the way it's supposed to be. They're plays ! They are meant to be played, in fornt of people who understand what it is about. This isn't avant garde **** where you're not supposed to understand anything.

    This isn't dumbing down Shakespeare per se, it's knocking it back down from its pedastal and giving the stories back to the people.
    I totally agree, but the entire thing depends on whether whoever does the arranging and adapting of the Shakespeare plays does it well
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    Tree Killer Senior Member Beirut's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Gah! See you, my princes, and my noble peers,
    these English monsters!


    A terrible idea. One of the most important aspects of reading Shakespeare is the effort required to understand it. As you study the language you dig deeper and deeper into the meaning. The wisdom of the words is not only revealed in more depth, but achieves a greater level of impact upon the reader.

    If the art department decides to bastardize (can I say that here?) an individual play, that's one thing. They have creative license. But for the educational system itself to take the heart and soul out of Shakespeare by making it convenient to the bored mind is to murder it. Might as well teach Mozart on a pair of $10 bongos and keep all symphonies to under one minute. Otherwise the kids might get restless, eh?

    It is the discipline required to appreciate the higher art forms that sets them apart. If you want Ren & Stimpy, fine, sit on the couch and eat and drink and fart to your heart's content. But if you want to see a Michelangelo. you have to go the museum, stand up, be quiet and let your brain have a go at it. The same with Shakespeare. It is a literary style that requires discipline and can only be truly appreciated through effort.
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    zombologist Senior Member doc_bean's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by Beirut
    [B]
    It is the discipline required to appreciate the higher art forms that sets them apart.
    That's part of the problem; shakespeare never wrote high art, he made entertainment.

    I don't say we abandon the old writing completely, because it will always have more depth than a modern 'translation'. But wouldn't it be nice if people could be introduced to Shakespeare in a more accessible way ? Wouldn't they appreciate it more or at least more easily ? And wouldn't those that were truly interested learn the middle English required to read it in its original form ?

    And those that don't, well, you can force people into a museum, but you can't force them to appreciate it.
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    Medical Welshman in London. Senior Member Big King Sanctaphrax's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    While I think that a simplified synopsis of the plays could be helpful to schoolchildren in studying them, I would say that it would have to be used alongside the regular text. The most satisfying thing for me about Shakespeare is the wonderful use of language, and you wouldn't be able to get that from a modern 'translation'.

    Edit-I looked for an article about this, but the only one I could find came from The Daily Mail, which has a tendency to be somewhat...melodramatic about things like this.

    Clicky

    Their problem seems to be with revision guides, which are quite obviously, despite the Mail's attempt to misrepresent it, supposed to be used in conjunction with a regular text. In any case, it's a commercial publication-schools don't have to buy them, and they're not set texts.

    What a non-issue.
    Last edited by Big King Sanctaphrax; 06-11-2006 at 12:38.
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    Tree Killer Senior Member Beirut's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by doc_bean
    That's part of the problem; shakespeare never wrote high art, he made entertainment.
    Agreed, but his entetainment became art, as did many of the works of the old masters, regardless of their art form.

    Quote Originally Posted by doc_bean
    But wouldn't it be nice if people could be introduced to Shakespeare in a more accessible way? Wouldn't they appreciate it more or at least more easily ? And wouldn't those that were truly interested learn the middle English required to read it in its original form?
    Agreed. That's how I learned about it.

    The art class, as I mentioned, has artistic license to modernize his plays. Several movies, some of them good, have done the same thing. I prefer these avenues be used to facilitate people's introduction to Shakespeare, and that the educational system remain true to the purity of what he wrote. The problem with the educational system itself "officially" changing the words is that it becomes very hard to change them back.

    The kids know that Hollywood Shakespeare isn't right. But if the teachers start pimping low IQ Shakespeare out of convenience and/or an inability to teach the real thing, then the art (entertainment) suffers as well as those exposed to it. Teach a whole generation to say "Maybe I is and maybe I isn't" and they will begin to believe it. A lie repeated often enough can become the truth. This literary tampering is like putting a fig leaf over the exposed areas of a Michelangelo. Convenient to the moment and always a bad idea.

    Quote Originally Posted by doc_bean
    And those that don't, well, you can force people into a museum, but you can't force them to appreciate it.
    Agreed. And we should still force them. Education is often forced. So is teeth brushing to a three year-old, but it's still beneficial. The end justifies the means.
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    Senior Member Senior Member naut's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by Beirut
    Gah! See you, my princes, and my noble peers,
    these English monsters!


    A terrible idea. One of the most important aspects of reading Shakespeare is the effort required to understand it. As you study the language you dig deeper and deeper into the meaning. The wisdom of the words is not only revealed in more depth, but achieves a greater level of impact upon the reader.

    If the art department decides to bastardize (can I say that here?) an individual play, that's one thing. They have creative license. But for the educational system itself to take the heart and soul out of Shakespeare by making it convenient to the bored mind is to murder it. Might as well teach Mozart on a pair of $10 bongos and keep all symphonies to under one minute. Otherwise the kids might get restless, eh?

    It is the discipline required to appreciate the higher art forms that sets them apart. If you want Ren & Stimpy, fine, sit on the couch and eat and drink and fart to your heart's content. But if you want to see a Michelangelo. you have to go the museum, stand up, be quiet and let your brain have a go at it. The same with Shakespeare. It is a literary style that requires discipline and can only be truly appreciated through effort.

    Agreed.

    Sure if I could I would slap Shakespeare for all the tedious hours of homework he has placed upon me. But, the guy was a genius. I mean who can write over 250 sonnets! The whole beauty of Shakespeare is the language and his ability to use the language in such a poetic and beautiful fashion.
    #Hillary4prism

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    Slain by mafia-implanted bombs Member littlelostboy's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dumbing down Shakespeare

    Quote Originally Posted by Rythmic
    Agreed.

    Sure if I could I would slap Shakespeare for all the tedious hours of homework he has placed upon me. But, the guy was a genius. I mean who can write over 250 sonnets! The whole beauty of Shakespeare is the language and his ability to use the language in such a poetic and beautiful fashion.
    I second that. That's guy a genius, many of our proverbs comes from him and he made English one of the 'best' and beautiful language in the world. Before him, it was considerd an coarse language spoken by the common people.
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