Macbeth by William Shakespeare In the second of a Five Books series marking the 400th year since the world's most popular playwright's death, eminent ShakespeareanRené Weispicks his five favourite plays, and explains whyKing Learwill change your life. ...
There was a great need for African literature through a colonial legacy to speak in African voice and these are part of the obvious reason that trigger African writers to search inwards for that which will help to elevate their literature and mark it out from the rest of literature produced i...
Macbeth in Shakespeare 's calamity has the symbolic significance, which is perfectly opposite as compared with Prometheus, but similar when compared with the image of Jupiter. The images attach toing another clip, the dark, which reveals to readers the ambiance of the general fright, unpunished of...
These observations are based on my experience with the English Literature AP (teacher, exam reader, exam reading table leader), but I am sure that they apply to English Language, History, and to some degree the Free Response Questions on any AP test (especially the part on legibility). Deve...
In Macbeth, violence, with its karmic effect, breeds violence. In Act one, Macbeth is reported about cutting Macdonwald open, “unseame[s] him from the nave to th’ chops, / [a]nd fixe[s] his head upon battlements” (I.ii.22-3)and is “[n]othing afeard of what [himself] ...
Shining a light on the past. Learn - ancient Rome, scrolls, disintegrate, breakt 02:32 Using 'too', 'very' and 'enough' - Goldilocks and the three bears-Rfg6FJ6k7J8 04:44 Flying food. Learn - restaurateurs, drones, diners, charted, the human touch-TnK 02:12 In the mood for love...
this class lets the students pick a variety of books and plays from a list called the AP List. I was able to choose some literature from this list that I grew fond of. After reading the play Hamlet by Shakespeare, I read Macbeth by the same author. This play kept me on my toes. ...
Posted inReflections on Teaching and Learning,Uncategorized|TaggedEducation,English teaching,literature,Macbeth|Leave a comment Thanks for the Memories, Mr. Bajger! Posted onJune 9, 2015byenglishparsons “Bajger is retiring.” Cue a chorus of high school girl awwwwww noises. That’s what I got...
In literature, caesura refers to a sentence or line being cut by punctuation. In poetry, it refers to how a line might end with a comma or other forms of punctuation, and in prose, it refers to how an author might divide a line by using a comma in one place rather than elsewhere. ...
cant, play the hypocrite, sham Abraham, faire pattes de velours, put on the mask, clean the outside of the platter, lie like a conjuror; hand out false colors, hold out false colors, sail under false colors; commend the poisoned chalice to the lips [Macbeth]; ambiguas in vulgum ...