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Three Acts of Comedy, Two of Tragedy

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About the lecture

In this module, we explore the ‘generic engineering’ of Romeo and Juliet – Shakespeare’s deployment of comedic devices in a play that ultimately turns out to be a tragedy.

About the lecturer

Born in Bristol, and educated at Oxford and St Louis, Dr John Lennard has taught English, American, and Commonwealth Literature in Cambridge, London, and Jamaica over more than twenty years. He has written two widely used textbooks (on poetry and drama) and monographs on Shakespeare, Paul Scott, Nabokov, and Faulkner, as well as two collections of essays on contemporary genre writers in crime, science fiction and fantasy, and romance. Enthusiastic, discursive, widely knowledgeable, and a demon for punctuation (on which he has also published extensively), he has been a popular Summer School Course Leader and lecturer for the Institute of Continuing Education since 1992.

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Lennard, J. (2018, August 15). Criticism - Three Acts of Comedy, Two of Tragedy [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/criticism-7d50c5f4-d0ce-4454-a61f-2e4d9f536f23?auth=0&lesson=413&option=9040&type=lesson

MLA style

Lennard, J. "Criticism – Three Acts of Comedy, Two of Tragedy." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 15 Aug 2018, https://massolit.io/options/criticism-7d50c5f4-d0ce-4454-a61f-2e4d9f536f23?auth=0&lesson=413&option=9040&type=lesson