Midsummer Nights Dream Study Glencoe
Midsummer Nights Dream Study Glencoe
Study Guide
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Copyright  by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
ittle is known about William Shakespeare, generally acknowledged as the greatest playwright of all time. In some ways, the lack of information is ironically fitting. Whereas we can draw on personal history to understand and explain the work of most writers, in the case of Shakespeare, we must rely primarily on his work. His command of comedy and tragedy, his ability to depict the range of human character, and his profound insights into human nature add clues to the few facts that are known about his life. William Shakespeare was born in April 1564 in the English town of Stratford-upon-Avon. The son of John Shakespeare, a successful glovemaker and public official, and Mary Arden, the daughter of a gentleman, William was the oldest surviving sibling of eight children. Shakespeare probably attended the local grammar school and studied Latin. His writings indicate that he was familiar with classical
But A Midsummer Nights Dream does not always do exactly what we might expect, and in this way it keeps its audience guessing . . .
Catherine Belsey, A Midsummer Nights Dream: A Modern Perspective
love? How and why do people fall in and out of love? How is love related to questions of identityboth of the lover and the beloved? Are lovers in control of themselves and their destinies? Which is more real, the daylight world of reason and law or the nighttime world of passion and chaos? Shakespeare leaves these questions for the audience to answer.
Shakespeare wrote A Midsummer Nights Dream toward the beginning of his career. The play describes the comic misadventures of two pairs of lovers who become lost in a dark wood and fall under the power of sprites. To Shakespeares audiences, the plays title was a clue that the play might be about romance, magic, and madness. Midsummer Night was thought to be one of the nights of the year when sprites were especially powerful. People also believed that flowers gathered on Midsummer Night could work magic and that Midsummer Night was a time when people dreamed of their true loves and sometimes went insane. Shakespeare and other Elizabethan dramatists based their comedy plots on Classical (ancient Greek and Roman) models. Often a grumpy old father blocks the love affair between a young man and a young woman. Complications and confusions follow, until finally, after some dramatic reversal, the lovers are united. Setting his first act in Athens, the birthplace of Western classical literature, Shakespeare follows just such a plot. It is not long, however, before the play moves to the woods outside Athens, and into the English concept of Midsummer Night. This tale of frustrated love and mistaken identity makes audiences laugh at the ridiculous ease with which lovers change the object of their affection, while still believing that their feelings are completely sincere. However, although it is a comedy, A Midsummer Nights Dream also poses some profound and difficult questions: What is
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A Midsummer Nights Dream contains a playwithin-a-play, which features comically clumsy writing, poor staging, cheap costumes, and awful acting. Furthermore, Oberon, the fairy king, can be seen as a kind of mad director, stage managing the passions of others for his own amusement or pleasure. Yet A Midsummer Nights Dream allows us to laugh at human nature and observe the interaction
between actors and audience. Pyramus and Thisbethe play-within-a-playmay be silly, but it is funny. A Midsummer Nights Dream can also be seen as a tribute to the magic of illusion. After waking from their dream parts in Oberons play, Bottom, Lysander, Demetrius, Helena, and Hermia all express a sense of wonder and bewilderment at their recent experience.
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BACKGROUND
Time and Place Shakespeare borrowed the characters of Theseus and Hippolyta from Greek mythology. Theseus was the national hero of Athens. He was a friend of Heracles (Hercules) and the survivor of many adventures, including his slaying of the Minotaur, a creature half man and half bull. Hippolyta was Queen of the Amazons, a group of female warriors. Theseus took her prisoner and then married her. Did You Know? The Renaissance is the period of European history that began in Italy in the 1300s and spread throughout Europe over the next two centuries. The word renaissance means rebirth, and during the Renaissance there was a rebirth of interest in art, architecture, and learning based on Classical (ancient Greek and Roman) sources. Shakespearean scholars believe that Shakespeare read many English translations of works by Homer, Ovid, Horace, Apuleius, and other classical writers and was deeply influenced by some of them.
VOCABULARY PREVIEW
austerity [o s ter  te  ] n. condition of lacking pleasure or luxury beguile [bi  l ] v. to trick cloister [klois tr] n. place where members of a religious community live dote [do  t] v. to love with foolish fondness extenuate [iks ten u  a  t] v. to lessen the seriousness of feign [fa  n] v. to pretend idolatry [  dol  tre ] n. false worship reveling [rev l in ] n. enjoying festivities
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Name
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Active Reading
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 1
Identify Hermias basic dilemma. What are the choices outlined for her by Theseus and her father? What other choice does Lysander suggest? Outline each option in the flowchart below. Hermias options according to:
Theseus
Lysander
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 1
Personal Response
How did you feel when you read Helenas decision to tell Demetrius about Hermia and Lysanders plan? Why did you feel this way?
Analyzing Literature
Recall and Interpret 1. Why is Egeus angry with his daughter?
3. How would you describe Bottoms acting ability? What is Bottoms own opinion of his acting ability?
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Name
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 1
Analyzing Literature (continued)
Evaluate and Connect 4. Describe Theseuss character. What sort of leader does he seem to be?
5. Do you think Egeus is justified in being angry with his daughter? Why or why not?
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BACKGROUND
Did You Know? Shakespeare did not create the character of Puck. Puck appears in many earlier works about magic and witchcraft. In some cases, he is presented as an evil goblin; in others he is merely naughty. Author Robert Burton (who lived a little later than Shakespeare) describes fire spirits who purposely mislead travelers: We commonly call them pucks. Generally the character of Puck is not malicious, but rather intent on amusing himself at the expense of others. Doubling In A Midsummer Nights Dream, Shakespeare makes use of a literary technique called doubling to explore different sides of reality. For example, in act 1 he introduces the daylight queen and king, Hippolyta and Theseus. In act 2 he introduces the nighttime queen and king, Titania and Oberon, who can be seen as doubles of the first pair. Hermia and Helena are doubles in many waysbest friends who have been brought up together, and who are both frustrated in love. Even their names sound alike. As characters there is very little difference between Demetrius and Lysander. Both are simply young men in love. As you read, pay attention to elements or characters in one part of the play that repeat or reflect elements in another part.
VOCABULARY PREVIEW
dissemble [di sem bl] v. to pretend flout [flout] v. to mock progeny [proj  ne  ] n. offspring promontory [prom n tor e  ] n. peak of land that juts out wanton [wont n] adj. shameless
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Active Reading
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 2
As you read act 2, identify images related to night. Write them down on the web below. Add more circles if you need to.
night
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Name
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 2
Personal Response
The sprites speak very poetically. Which image or images presented by the sprites do you remember the best? What makes the images memorable?
Analyzing Literature
Recall and Interpret 1. Why are Oberon and Titania fighting?
2. How does Oberon intend to blackmail Titania into giving him what he wants?
3. By the end of act 2, what is similar about the following pairs: Lysander and Hermia, Demetrius and Helena, and Oberon and Titania?
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Name
Date
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 2
Analyzing Literature (continued)
Evaluate and Connect 4. How would you describe the character of Puck? What kind of mood does he create?
5. How might the magical herb described by Oberon act as a metaphor for the way infatuation operates in real life? Explain.
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BACKGROUND
Comedy or Tragedy? One of the many lines Shakespeare blurs in A Midsummer Nights Dream is the one between comedy and tragedy. Bottoms actors rehearse a play about the legendary lovers Pyramus and Thisbe. The script and the performances by the mechanics are so silly that the play becomes a sort of slapstick comedy. Yet it is based on a tragic and rather gruesome story that the Latin poet Ovid retold in his poem The Metamorphoses. Perception versus Sight Seeing is the act of using the eyes to gain physical knowledge about the world. Perceiving is the psychological act of interpreting information received through the eyes and other senses. In act 3, Shakespeare plays with ideas of vision, of blindness, and of different ways of interpreting what one sees. One of the things that love, or infatuation, does is to make the lover see the beloved as perfect, no matter what the actual circumstances. As you read this act, pay special attention to imagery of eyes and seeing. Analyze what Shakespeare is saying about the nature of perception.
VOCABULARY PREVIEW
bequeath [bi kwe  th ] v. to leave to or pass on to, as in a will chide [chd] v. to scold derision [di rizh n] n. scorn entreat [en tre  t ] v. to beg rebuke [ri bu  k ] v. to scold recompense [rek m pens] n. payment sojourn [so  jurn] v. to stay somewhere for a while spurn [spurn] v. to reject
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Name
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Active Reading
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 3
The climax, or turning point, of A Midsummer Nights Dream comes at the end of act 3. Describe the climax in the box at the top of the diagram below. In the other boxes, write the major events leading up to the climax. Write the events in the correct chronological order. You may add more boxes if you wish.
Climax
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Class
Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 3
Personal Response
Some critics see Bottom as a fool. Others think he is wiser than he appears. What is your opinion of Bottom?
Analyzing Literature
Recall and Interpret 1. How does Bottom become an ass? What is the reason for this strange event?
3. What causes Helena to become angry with Hermia? In your opinion, why does Helena refuse to believe her friend and her would-be lovers?
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Name
Date
Class
Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 3
Analyzing Literature (continued)
Evaluate and Connect 4. In act 3, what emotion does Oberon show he is capable of? How does he show this?
5. Think of characters from television or the movies who are tricksters like Puck. Why might audiences enjoy watching the antics of such characters?
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BACKGROUND
Did You Know? A curious feature of A Midsummer Nights Dream is the casual way in which Shakespeare mixes his settings. Whereas some of his fairies are beings from Celtic and Anglo-Saxon folklore, and the flowers and seasons he describes belong to the English countryside, Theseus and Hippolyta inhabit the world of ancient Greece. In this act, the royal lovers refer to Sparta, an ancient Greek city; Thessaly, a region of Greece; and Crete, a Greek island. Then, amusingly, Theseus mentions St. Valentine, a Christian martyr who lived and died long after the era in which Theseus would have lived. Falling Action After the climax, or turning point, of a drama has been reached, most of the suspense is over. The highest emotional peak has been reached, and the major conflict has been encountered. Still, the audience likes to see all of the loose ends tied up. That occurs during the part of the plot known as the falling action. In A Midsummer Nights Dream, the falling action mostly takes place in act 4.
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VOCABULARY PREVIEW
discourse [dis kors] n. conversation enmity [en m te  ] n. hostility paragon [par  on] n. model of perfection
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Active Reading
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 4
In this act, a number of characters wake up. Complete the diagram below. In each box, write the name of a character who wakes up in act 4. Then, in the space beside the box, summarize that characters reaction to what happened during the night.
Character
Reaction
T itania
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 4
Personal Response
Compare this act to the previous one. In which act did the majority of the characters enjoy themselves most? Which act did you enjoy more? Explain.
Analyzing Literature
Recall and Interpret 1. How does Titania respond when Oberon asks for the fairy child this time? What does this reveal about the strength of the love potion?
2. How do most of the dreamers respond to the dream experience upon waking? Which character is changed permanently by the dream experience?
3. How does Theseuss current decision regarding Hermia and Lysander contradict his earlier statement?
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Name
Date
Class
Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 4
Analyzing Literature (continued)
Evaluate and Connect 4. The fourth act opens and ends with Bottom at center stage. What is your opinion of Bottoms character? How might he be the antithesis, or opposite, of Theseuss character?
5. In this act, several characters look back at prior infatuations with disbelief. What do you think Shakespeare is saying about love and infatuation?
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BACKGROUND
Did You Know? For wealthy Elizabethans, entertainment was something quite different from todays CD/video/television center. Elizabethans, poor and rich, watched live entertainment. Nobles and members of the royalty could afford to have performers come to their homes. Sometimes they watched knights jousting in courtyards or tennis players competing in special indoor rooms. Often they watched theater. Every year, one of Englands great theater companies would be chosen to appear at the court of Queen Elizabeth I. The Queens Master of the Revels (like Theseuss Master of the Revels, Philostrate) would watch a number of performances and pick the best. Then no expense was spared for the final production. Workers painted elaborate sets and made costumes out of silk and velvet. Shakespeares Relevance Shakespeare writes about kings and queens, fairies, magic spells, and ancient Athens. Yet he is such a keen observer of human psychology that his characters and themes still speak to todays audiences. For example, in the characters of the star-crossed lovers, Shakespeare skillfully illustrates the feelings and actions experienced by two people who are infatuated with each other. At the same time, he shows how silly and ridiculous those actions may seem to someone who does not share these feelings. He sums up the attitude of the outside observer in the often-quoted words of Puck, what fools these mortals be! (act 3, scene 2, line 115). These are all feelings that we can relate to today.
VOCABULARY PREVIEW
amends [ mends ] n. something done to make up for a fault or mistake audacious [o da  shs] adj. bold gait [ a t] n. manner of walking premeditated [pre  med i ta  t d] adj. planned reprehend [repri hend ] v. to find fault with satire [sat r] n. literary work exposing human vices and shortcomings to ridicule and scorn transfigure [trans fi yr] v. to change
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Active Reading
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 5
Shakespeare uses a number of different techniques to create humor in the play-within-a-play. Use the graphic organizer below to indicate examples of some of his comic devices.
ridiculous metaphor
excessive alliteration
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 5
Personal Response
Did the play-within-a-play make you laugh? Look back at your response to the Focus Activity on page 28 to help you explain your answer. Make a list of some of the more humorous lines in the play performed by Bottom and his actors.
Analyzing Literature
Recall and Interpret 1. What does Theseus think of the lovers adventure? Is this a reaction you would expect from Theseus?
3. Why does Snug, who plays the Lion, make a fuss about proclaiming his true identity?
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 5
Analyzing Literature (continued)
Evaluate and Connect 4. In reading the play-within-a-play, we become the audience for the drama played out by Theseus, Hippolyta, and the others. These performers, in turn, form the audience for the reenactment of Pyramus and Thisbe. How does observing another audience help you understand the relationship between audience and performers?
5. Modern television shows often create comic effects by having a silly, innocent, or clueless character and a sarcastic, knowing, clever character play off of each other. What examples can you think of?
Hippolytas Response Hippolyta is rather embarrassed at times by how the audience makes fun of the players. At other times she joins in the fun. Imagine yourself as Hippolyta. Write a brief explanation of why the show was so ridiculous and why you eventually came to enjoy yourself.
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Responding
A Midsummer Nights Dream
Personal Response
After reading and studying this play, would you watch a performance of it? Why or why not? How do you think watching A Midsummer Nights Dream would change your response to the play?
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Comedy
Before You Read
Focus Question Background
Christopher Fry
What are some things that make you laugh? Do you ever wonder why sometimes things that were not intended to be humorous seem funny? In A Midsummer Nights Dream, Shakespeare turns what might have been a tragedy into a comedy. Christopher Frys article, which appeared in Vogue magazine, reflects on the nature of comedy and laughter and their relation to the big picture of life.
2. Do you think that laughter is a way to deal with the tragedies we experience in life? Explain.
3. Making Connections In creating characters for a comedy, Fry says, If the characters were not qualified for tragedy there would be no comedy. How might this statement apply to the characters of Helena, Lysander, Hermia, and Demetrius in A Midsummer Nights Dream?
Literature Groups
Within your group, have each person identify some lines or scenes in A Midsummer Nights Dream that seem funny. Discuss why you think they are funny. What characteristics or events seem to make people laugh the most? Do your opinions seem to fit in with Frys description of comedy?
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Background
Norrie Epstein teaches literature at the University of California. In an effort to make Shakespeare more accessible, she wrote a book called The Friendly Shakespeare: A Thoroughly Painless Guide to the Best of the Bard. The following selection draws on advice from different experts on how to understand and enjoy Shakespeare.
2. Whose advice makes the most sense to you? Explain your choice.
3. Making Connections In your opinion, would it be better to see or read A Midsummer Nights Dream? Justify your answer.
Expert Advice
Having read one of Shakespeares comedies, imagine that you are a Shakespearean expert and Norrie Epstein has asked you to contribute to her book. Write a few lines of advice to a Shakespearean novice on what you think is the best way to approach Shakespeares plays.
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Background
This newspaper article was written by Victoria McKee. McKee covers a range of modern film adaptations of Shakespeares plays.
2. How do big-name actors attract people who would otherwise not read or see any of Shakespeares plays?
3. Making Connections In terms of modernizing Shakespeare, with whose approach do you agree, Branaghs or McKellens?
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Background
Lynne Heffley interviews artistic director Lisa Wolpe about the adaptation of A Midsummer Nights Dream by the Los Angeles Womens Shakespeare Company.
3. Making Connections Do you agree with Lisa Wolpe that New York City makes a good setting for a modern Midsummer Nights Dream? Why or why not?
Costume Design
With a partner, create costume representations for at least two of the characters in the play. Leaf through fashion magazines for inspiration, or look in the fine arts section of your library. You may even draw ideas from other cultural traditions to create your designs. The main idea is to keep the costume true to the character.
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Background
Jennifer Lee Carrell, a Shakespearean scholar from Harvard, takes a trip out West and discovers just how popular the playwright was among cowboys and miners.
3. How important was the audience to Western theater in the nineteenth century?
4. What do you suppose Lawrence Levine means when he suggests that When Shakespeare stopped being story and began to be art, it began to seem distant?
5. Making Connections How do you think Shakespeare would have reacted to a nineteenth-century Western audience?
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