Video: Plot
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Paper examines Hamlet by William Shakespeare
By Rajen Jani | Published 3/31/2008
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The issue is complex, fraught with logic pitfalls even for those who defend the orthodoxy, but Shakespeare remains the easiest of any authorship candidate to defend.
By J. M. Pressley | Published 3/3/2008
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A look into William Shakespeare and a summarization of his last completed play, The Tempest.
By Cynthia Leigh | Published 8/22/2006
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Situated in the heart of the English midlands is a pretty little town called Stratford-Upon-Avon. Stratford is a market town that dates back to Medieval times, but more importantly, it is the birthplace of one William Shakespeare, Elizabethan playwright.
By Karen Reams | Published 11/28/2007
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Elizabethan poet and playwright William Shakespeare was the ultimate wordsmith, and countless modern expressions have evolved from his writings. Here are several of my own favorites.
By Linda Ann Nickerson | Published 8/29/2007
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William Shakespeare, Poetry, Spring, Marriage, humorous
By Joanna Lopez | Published 12/13/2006
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William Shakespeare, the best-known figure in Renaissance literature, if not all of literature, was born April 23, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, a town near London.
By James Wolfe | Published 3/23/2006
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A detailed overview of the classic of Othello by William Shakespeare
By InvestingPennies.com | Published 2/25/2008
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William Shakespeare created works that live on even centuries after they were written. If you are one who considers Shakespeare's words an of out dated, difficult to understand language and adamantly reply "it's Greek to me," you are quoting William Shakespeare!
By CSW | Published 5/16/2007
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There's been much speculation and debate about the true authorship of Shakespeare.
By Gemma Argent | Published 4/3/2007
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For hundreds of years, scholars have fought over the true identity of William Shakespeare.
By Gemma Argent | Published 5/21/2007
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This is a critical review of the information supplied by PBS in its telling of the life and tiems of Shakespeare.
By Steven Thor Gunnin | Published 10/20/2006
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The title gives a descriptive overview
By Chris O'Grady | Published 10/28/2007
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Everyone goes to London but one of the most famous places to visit is Stratford-upon-Avon situated in the Midlands of England. Why do people go there? Mainly because of William Shakespeare.
By Susan S | Published 7/12/2007
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Since the 1700s, people have been voicing doubts about whether or not William Shakespeare actually wrote the works attributed to him. Now it's all the rage.
By J. M. Pressley | Published 9/24/2007
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William Shakespeare is arguably one of the most important figures in English literature, contributing not only numerous plays but also his sonnets. Here examined is the man's life, and how both others and myself view his works.
By Jaimee Jensen | Published 2/8/2007
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A critical analysis of PBS' speculaiton regarding the life of William Shakespeare.
By Steven Thor Gunnin | Published 10/20/2006
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In the beginning, the Sicilian School of court poets seemingly devised the sonnet form sometime around the 13th century.
By Rob Kuhns | Published 12/28/2006
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A list of great gifts for every Shakespeare lover and fun stuff for those new to the playwright. All of them can be found online.
By Sophia Sanchez | Published 11/15/2006
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Some say that the 46th Psalm is proof that Shakespeare helped with the translation of the 46th Psalm because there appears to be a hidden message in it with his name. Is this a coincidence or not?
By Andrew Murphy | Published 11/9/2007
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If you want your kids to learn Shakespeare, try these movies.
By Steve Helmer | Published 12/20/2007
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Obviously, the entire play revolves around the character of Hamlet, but Queen Gertrude, his mother, is also very complex. She is both oppressed and ignorant at the same time, making her a very appealing character to study.
By Steve DiMatteo | Published 6/26/2007
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Acknowledged as one of the greatest writers that ever lived, Shakespeare was also one of the most mysterious.
By Ria | Published 4/30/2005
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After almost 400 years Shakespeare is still loved in New York City's Central Park.
By Renee Morway | Published 9/10/2007
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Why does Shakespeare sometime do away with poetry and introduce prose in his plays?
By Timothy Sexton | Published 8/14/2007
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how both Shakespeare as a writer and Galileo as an astronomial visionary shaped their times as well as the future
By Werner Haas | Published 5/7/2007
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Georgia Shakespeare is the second largest professional theatre in Georgia that produces plays and educational programs.
By Tina Samuels | Published 4/17/2007
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The Forest Park Shakespeare festival offers a great cultural summer experience.
By Clayton Smith | Published 5/31/2007
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A detailed look at how appearance differs from reality in King Claudius- one of the primary characters in William Shakespeare's tragic play Hamlet.
By Carbatonic Funk | Published 10/25/2007
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Shakespeare often includes supernatural beings in his works. Often, the mortals who interact with these beings have seeminly no control over what happens to them. However, this is not entirely true.
By Erin Hune Glover | Published 2/15/2007
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Jon Jory has a true love of theatre and interpretation, but he likes to think outside the box in his directing of plays. A play can be interpreted in any number of ways, depending on what we want to see in it: "Shakespeare does not mean; we mean by Shakespeare."
By David McD | Published 7/23/2007
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Did you know that Shakespeare wrote a play so bad it wouldn't even be accepted by Fox if were sold as a movie today? Does that mean Shakespeare isn't the genius we've told he was?
By Timothy Sexton | Published 11/23/2006
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Many scholars, historians and psychologists believe that romantic love is an invention, and Shakespeare has served as an inspiration and resource for lovers worldwide for centuries.
By Jennifer Thompson | Published 12/17/2007
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None to speakof.
By Chris O'Grady | Published 2/15/2007
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Interprets the mousetrap scene of Hamlet through various Elizabethan definitions of the word "play" found in the Oxford English Dictionary.
By Stacy Coyne | Published 5/12/2006
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William Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564, in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. He was born to John Shakespeare and Mary Arden, a glover/leather merchant and local land heiress, respectively.
By MR | Published 4/9/2008
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Description of William Shakespeare and the life around this famous playwright.
By T-Gue | Published 5/1/2008
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William Manton tells story of how he met Moolah.
By Spider Lady | Published 11/21/2007
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Without the efforts of two actors, John Heminge and Henry Condell, world might have simply forgotten the genius of William Shakespeare's plays...
By Andrew Murphy | Published 2/13/2008
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This paper examines the unique qualities that have made William Shakespeare's work endure over the centuries.
By Roger Mexico | Published 8/22/2007
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There is no way to prove the nature of William Shakespeare's sexuality, but I think that it's an interesting topic so I'm going to write about it despite the fact that it can't be proved.
By Allison Michelle | Published 7/10/2007
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One of three versions of what happened on the night of May 30,1593, the Marlovian theory hangs on a faked death belief. Other versions of Christopher Marlowe's death include an accidental drunken brawl and an assassination bought by the Queen herself.
By Tina Samuels | Published 5/28/2006
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Shakespeare's sonnet 116 is one of his most popular. Perhaps because it contains all the elements necessary for a perfect sonnet.
By Timothy Sexton | Published 3/20/2007
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Comparison of the writing style's of two of England's most popular authors.
By Rick Amburgey | Published 9/22/2006
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A plot summary poem.
By William Pinn | Published 8/1/2007
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The 1952 version of The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice is an adaptation of a famous William Shakespeare play that was edited, produced, and directed by a single man: Orson Welles--the self-proclaimed "one man band."
By Robert Lewis | Published 2/8/2008
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This paper researches the multiple areas of influence and accomplishments of William Blake.
By Michael Profumo | Published 9/12/2006
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Is the Shakespeare we know the one who actually wrote those classic works of literature that billions know, and love, and cherish even today?
By inheritance | Published 5/28/2008
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William Shakespeare's poem "Not marble, nor the gilded monuments brings the reader to the sense of what is not important. His title captivates the reader's imagination with images of coldness and wealth.
By Miriam Torres | Published 10/5/2007
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