Class Number: 1289
Description: Hours: Three hours lecture per week Prerequisite: Junior Standing Description: This course explores how Shakespeare¿s plays can be mobilized as tools for social justice. Students will read a selection of Shakespeare¿s plays, study their historical and performance contexts, and analyze several recent productions of those plays. Students are invited to harness the cultural capital of Shakespeare to create production concepts that address issues of social justice, including racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, ableism, and environmental injustices.

Info has been updated in the last 30 minutes
Days Time Date Range Location Instructor
W 06:00 PM - 08:50 PM 08/22/2015 - 12/21/2015 Bell Tower 1302 Bob Mayberry
Status: Open
Session: Regular Academic Session
Units: 3.00
Class Components: Lecture
Career: Undergraduate
Start Date: 08/22/2015
End Date: 12/21/2015
Grading: Letter Grade

Class Availability

Information below is 24 hours old.
Enrollment Total: 28
Available Seats: 2
Wait List Capacity: 10
Wait List Total: 0


Textbook / Other Materials

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 039332737X
Title: Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespe
Author: Greenblatt
Publish: Norton

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 0743484967
Title: Twelfth Night
Author: Shakespeare
Publish: Simon & Schuster

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 978-0743482752
Title: Much Ado About Nothing
Author: Shakespeare
Publish: Simon & Schuster

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 978-0743484923
Title: Love¿s Labor¿s Lost
Author: Shakespeare
Publish: Simon & Schuster

Textbook Status: Required
ISBN: 0470658517
Title: 30 Great Myths about Shakespeare
Author: Maguire & Smith
Publish: Wiley-Blackwell

More textbook information including prices

Enrollment Information

  • Upper Division
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