Jennifer Pederson

Dissertation

Critical Review

The first article that I discovered by using the MLA Database was “Teaching Shakespeare in the Context of Renaissance Women’s Culture”, by Jane Donawerth. Jane Donawerth is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Maryland at College Park, where she teaches Renaissance literature, history of rhetorical theory, and science fiction and utopias by women. In this particular article she explores the issues around teaching the subject of Shakespeare and the frameworks in which it is taught. Donawerth wants to “build a course from a feminist standpoint in which students possess such authority.”

Donawerth describes the content of her course and how she taught it, “I organized the content of the course in concentric circles of kinds of knowledge, rather than in linear fashion, and I limited to four the number of plays all students read.” The idea of using only four plays to focus on relates to my dissertation topic, as I intend on only using a small number of plays to analyse and explore my topic, therefore enabling a greater depth of research than as if I was to study more plays. Also, the idea of the concentric circles as a method of teaching and studying would be a very constructive approach to use for the dissertation, as it will help break themes down into certain categories, making it easier to look at and more straightforward to research. These concentric circles involved “close-reading of a play by Shakespeare, some useful theoretical tools for interpretation, early modern women’s texts, and some relevant historical material about the position and roles of women.” I could use some of these ideas from this system to help me analyse certain themes in the different plays I am studying.

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In the article, Donawerth mentions that her class looked at Richard III, and that they, “emphasized the misogyny of the male characters and the division between the worlds of men and women as a sign of social malfunction.” This could help when writing the dissertation, as I could use this idea and adapt it to my research when looking at Richard III. Similarly, through discussion about The Winter’s Tale their ideas, “centered on marriage and parent-child relationships,” therefore, I may be able to use this idea when exploring my own ideas about this play.

Also, when reading the footnotes associated with the article, it ...

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