LITR19056 Shakespeare: The Movie

Course description

This course aims to introduce students to the study of Shakespeare in a contemporary context and to provide them with opportunities to explore different ways in which the Bard can and has been read/watched. The works of Shakespeare to do not produce universal truths so much as generate culturally determined possibilities, both of the time of writing and of reading. Students will explore recent filmic renderings of Shakespeare's plays as generative instances of these possibilities. Students will also explore issues raised by the films/plays including those associated with comedy, tragedy, race, gender, class, notions of divine being, war, authority, ambition, death, subjectivity, identify, and (post) colonialism.

Course at a glance

Faculty: Faculty of Arts, Health and Sciences
Career: Undergraduate
Units of credit: 6
Requisites: Prerequisite: Minimum of 18 Units
Student Contribution Band: Band 1
EFTSL 0.12500

[View fees and charges information]

Course availability

Term Campuses
T2 FLEX: ROK
T3 FLEX