You are asked to identify a theme/s and visual imagery developed from your research into your chosen author’s work/s and or life to develop and produce either
a) a set, series or sequence of 5-10 prints (dependant on scale, process and content)
b) a publication, book or zine*
c) a print-based product or products
Themes and imagery will be generated through a combination of independent practice, workshops in printing processes and techniques and concept / ideas development in studio groups. The way in which you approach this is entirely open. This brief is designed to encourage both the development of your individual voice and consideration of informed and thoughtful / appropriate application through creative production, exploration and crafting.
.* if choosing to make a zine you are still expected to show a significant understanding of (and ability to use) traditional print media, stock choice, format and production to an appropriate level.This resource is designed as a reference guide for teachers. We have listed the major themes and motifs within A Midsummer Night's Dream and provided examples of scenes where they can be studied.
Themes
Motifs(Recurring elements and patterns of imagery in A Midsummer Night's Dream which support the play's themes)
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This document is designed as a resource for teachers which can be adapted to use with your students.
Themes in A Midsumer Night's Dream (PDF 81KB) »
This document is designed as a resource for teachers which can be adapted to use with your students.
Themes
- Act 1 Scene 1: Theseus describes his courtship of Hippolyta and the confusion of the four lovers begins with Egeus' formal complaint about his daughter's involvement with Lysander.
- Act 2 Scene 1: Oberon and Titania quarrel over the Indian boy; Helena confronts Demetrius in the wood.
- Act 3 Scene 2: Lysander falls in love with Helena on awakening with the love juice in his eyes: the lovers are in great confusion.
- Act 4 Scene 1: Titania expresses her love for Bottom who has been transformed into a donkey.
- Act 5 Scene 1: Three weddings and a fairy blessing bring all to a happy conclusion.
Order and disorder and the need for a balance between the rational and irrational, between rules and magic, in the interests of love, harmony and creativity.
Some related scenes:
- Act 1 Scene 1: Theseus describes Hermia's punishment if she disobeys her father, prompting the lovers' escape to the woods.
- Act 2 Scene 1: Titania describes the consequences for the natural world of her quarrel with Oberon.
- Act 3 Scene 1: Bottom's transformation disrupts the Mechanicals' rehearsal.
- Act 3 Scene 2: Puck's mistakes bring the lovers to great confusion.
- Act 4 Scene 1: Titania expresses her love for Bottom who has been transformed into a donkey.
- Act 5 Scene 1: Three weddings and a fairy blessing bring all to a happy conclusion.
- Act 3 Scene 1: Bottom's transformation disrupts the Mechanicals' rehearsal.
- Act 3 Scene 2: Puck's mistakes bring the lovers to great confusion.
- Act 4 Scene 1: Titania awakes from her fantasy and the lovers comment on how like a dream recent events seem to them now.
- Act 5 Scene 1: The play within the play highlights the theme of illusion and reality.
Creative imagination and its reliance on the unconscious, the magical, the mysterious.
Some related scenes:
- Act 4 Scene 1: Titania awakes from her fantasy, the lovers comment on how like a dream recent events seem to them now and Bottom tells of his vision.
- Act 5 Scene 1: Theseus describes the poet's art, the play within the play provides its comment on artistic enterprise and all ends in harmony with the fairies' blessing of the sleeping house.
Motifs
Nature representing the magical world of the forest in contrast to Theseus's court; also as disrupted by the disharmony between the fairy king and queen.
For example:
For example:
- 'And through this distemperature we see/The seasons alter...'
Act 2 Scene 1 - 'I know a bank where the wild thyme grows...'
Act 2 Scene 1 - 'You spotted snakes with double tongue...'
Act 2 Scene 2 - 'Out of this wood do not desire to go: / Thou shalt remain here, whether thou wilt or no. / I am a spirit of no common rate...'
Act 3 Scene 1 - 'I'll follow you, I'll lead you about a round, / Through bog, through bush, through brake, through briar: / Sometime a horse I'll be, sometime a hound...'
Act 3 Scene 1
The Moon reflecting change, disruption and unpredictability, romance, the magical and mysterious, a journey.
For example:
- 'Four happy days bring in/Another moon'
Act 1 Scene 1 - 'I'll met by moonlight, proud Titania'
Act 2 Scene 1 - 'Therefore the moon, the governess of floods, / Pale in her anger, washes all the air...'
Act 2 Scene 2 - 'We the globe can compass soon, / Swifter than the wandering moon'
Act 4 Scene 1 - 'Now the hungry lion roars, / And the wolf behowls the moon'
Act 5 Scene 1
Sleep and dreams which take us to mysterious places, are states of innocence and vulnerability, cause confusion and the blurring of boundaries between fantasy and reality.
For example:
- 'Ay me, for pity! what a dream was here!'
Act 2 Scene 2 - 'Tell me how it came this night / That I sleeping here was found / With these mortals on the ground'
Act 4 Scene 1 - 'It seems to me / That yet we sleep, we dream'
Act 4 Scene 1 - 'God's my life, stolen hence, and left me asleep! I have had a most rare vision. I have had a dream...'
Act 4 Scene 1 - 'Why, then, we are awake: let's follow him / And by the way let us recount our dreams'
Act 4 Scene 1 - 'I will get Peter Quince to write a ballad of this dream: it shall be called Bottom's Dream, because it hath no bottom'
Act 4 Scene 1
Eyes as emblems of perception and perspective, as entryways to the heart, windows on the soul
For example:
- 'I would my father look'd but with my eyes'
Act 1 Scene 1 - 'Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind'
Act 1 Scene 1 - 'Reason becomes the marshal to my will / And leads me to your eyes, where I o'erlook / Love's stories written in love's richest book'
Act 2 Scene 2 - 'And then I will her charmed eye release / From monster's view, and all things shall be peace'
Act 3 Scene 2 - 'Methinks I see these things with parted eye, / When every thing seems double'
Act 4 Scene 1 - 'The poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling, / Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven...'
Act5 Scene 1
Plays, rehearsals and roles/parts as symbols of magical transformation and of experimentation and preparation; also as ironic comment on the insubstantiality of A Midsummer Night's Dream and its themes.
For example:
- 'Nay, faith, let me not play a woman; I have a beard coming'
Act1 Scene 2 - 'You can play no part but Pyramus'
Act 1 Scene 2 - 'We will meet; and there we may rehearse most obscenely and courageously. Take pains; be perfect: adieu'
Act 1 Scene 2 - 'Thus have I, Wall, my part discharged so; / And, being done, thus Wall away doth go'
Act 5 Scene 1 - 'If we shadows have offended, / Think but this, and all is mended: / That you have but slumbered here / While these visions did appear'
Act 5 Scene 1
- 'And this same progeny of evils comes/From our debate, from our dissension'
Act 2 Scene 2 - 'That very time I saw, but thou couldst not, / Flying between the cold moon and the earth, / Cupid all arm'd...'
Act 2 Scene 1 - 'The juice of it on sleeping eye-lids laid / Will make or man or woman madly dote / Upon the next live creature that it sees'
Act 2 Scene 1 - 'I'll put a girdle round the earth/In forty minutes'
Act 2 Scene 1 - 'But who comes here? I am invisible; / And I will overhear their conference'
Act 2 Scene 1 - 'Churl, upon thy eyes I throw / All the power this charm doth owe'
Act 2 Scene 2 - ' Sometime a horse I'll be, sometime a hound...'
Act 3 Scene 1 - 'Bless thee, Bottom! bless thee! thou art translated'
Act 3 Scene 1 - 'Now, until the break of day, / Through this house each fairy stray. To be best bride-bed will we, / Which by us shall blessed be'
Act 5 Scene 1
http://www.rsc.org.uk/explore/a-midsummer-nights-dream/teachers-resources/themes.aspx
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