EKSPERIMENTALNI HAMLET ILI KAKO POPULARIZOVATI KLASIČNU KNJIŽEVNOST

Главни садржај чланка

Nina D. Ilić

Сажетак

Alternativne metode podučavanja književnosti se danas sve više koriste. Nastavnici i profesori često pribegavaju netradicionalnim načinima predavanja Šekspirovih dela, što zbog promena koje su prisutne kod same prirode čitanja, što zbog sve veće okruženosti digitalnom tehnologijom. Cilj ovog rada jeste da ispita stav učenika prema jednoj modernoj pozorišnoj adaptaciji Hamleta. Šest učenika je učestvovalo u kreativnoj radionici nakon gledanja predstave. Izvedeni zaključci pokazuju da iako su reakcije učenika na predstavu bile uglavnom pozitivne, nije se svima dopao savremeni način čitanja klasične literature. Mlađi učenici su u većoj meri izneli pozitivan stav prema modernism adaptacijama klasične literature. Međutim, studija koja bi uključila veći broj učesnika i fokusirala se na oštriji kontrast između doživljaja tradicionalnih i modernijih verzija književnih dela je neophodna kako bi se ove tendencije potvrdile.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Детаљи чланка

Како цитирати
Ilić, N. D. (2017). EKSPERIMENTALNI HAMLET ILI KAKO POPULARIZOVATI KLASIČNU KNJIŽEVNOST. Методички видици, 7(7), 441–458. https://doi.org/10.19090/mv.2016.7.441-458
Bрој часописа
Секција
НАСТАВА СТРАНИХ ЈЕЗИКА, КЊИЖЕВНОСТИ И КУЛТУРА
Author Biography

Nina D. Ilić

Univerzitet u Novom Sadu
Filozofski fakultet – doktorske studije Jezik i književnost
Novi Sad

Референце

Barker H. (2002). Gertrude: (the cry); and, Knowledge and a girl : (the Snow White case). London: Calder.
Bradley, A. C. (1971). Shakespearean Tragedy. London: St Martin’s Press.
Burt, R. (1998). Unspeakable ShaXXXspeares: Queer Theory and American Kiddie Culture. London: Macmillan Press.
Burt, R. (2003). “Shakespeare 'Glo-cali-zation,' Race, and the Small Screens of Post-Popular Culture”, in Shakespeare the Movie, II: Popularizing the Plays on Film, TV, Video, and DVD, ed. R. Burt & L. E. Boose (New York and London: Routledge Press): 14-32.
Campbell, L. B. (1930). Shakespeare’s Tragic Heroes, Slaves of Passion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Coursen, H. R. (1997). Teaching Shakespeare with Film and Television. Westport, CT: Greenwood.
Curcio, M. (2009). “Pedagogical Methods & Hamlet: Treating Students as Critics, Artists, and Learners”. The Griffin: 136-143.
Eksperiment u SNP Hamlet se vratio posle pola veka u Novi Sad i - žensko je (2016, January 27), Blic. Retrieved on 30 March 2016. URL: http://www.blic.rs/kultura/vesti/eksperiment-u-snp-hamlet-se-vratio-posle-pola-veka-u-novi-sad-i-zensko-je/ve4mm0b
Fischer, S. R. (2003). A History of Reading. London: Reaktion Books.
Fischlin, D., & Fortier, M. (2000). Adaptations of Shakespeare: A critical anthology of plays from the seventeenth century to the present. London: Routledge.
Foakes, R. A. (1993). Hamlet versus Lear: Cultural politics and Shakespeare's art. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Freud, S. (1900). The interpretation of dreams. S.E., 4-5.
Frossard, J. (2012). “A (Graphic) Novel Approach to Teaching Shakespeare: Embracing Non-Traditional Texts in the Secondary EnglishClassroom”. All Student Publications 91.
Gordić-Petković, V. (2007). “Od vizuelnog do virtuelnog: medijske transpozicije Šekspira”. Nasleđe, časopis za književnost, jezik, umetnost i kulturu, FILUM, Kragujevac 8: 33-39.
HAMNET” ==== Shakespeare’s play adapted for irc (1993, December). Retrieved on 20 March 2016. URL: http://www.hambule.co.uk/hamnet/hscript.htm
Johnson, K. (1998). “Teaching Shakespeare to Learning Disabled Students”. English Journal 87(3): 45-49.
Kirwan, P. (2014). “'From the table of my memory': blogging Shakespeare in/out of the classroom”, in: Shakespeare and the digital world: redefining scholarship and practice, ed. C. Carson & P. Kirwan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press): 100-112.
Mack, M. (1952). “The World of Hamlet”. Yale Review 41: 502-523.
McKenna, M. C., Kear, D. J., & Ellsworth, R. A. (1995). “Children's attitudes toward reading: A national survey”. Reading Research Quarterly 30: 934-956.
Milić, N. (2000). Predavanja o čitanju. Beograd: Narodna knjiga/Alfa.
Perić, D. (2005). “Lik kraljevića Hamleta u neoanalitičkoj perspektivi”. Pedagoška stvarnost, časovis za školska i kulturno-prosvetna pitanja 9/10: 714-737.
Porter, S. (1999). Introduction: technology in teaching literature and culture: some refections. Teaching European Literature and Culture with Communication and Information Technologies. Retrieved on 27 April 2016. URL: http://users.ox.ac.uk/~ctitext2/publish/occas/eurolit/porter.html
Sanders, J. (2006). Adaptation and appropriation. London: Routledge.
Shakespeare, W., In Johnson, S., Vertue, G., Corbet, C., Woodfall, H., Rivington, J., Baldwin, R., Executors of B. Dodd (London, England). (1765). The plays of William Shakespeare: In eight volumes. London: Printed for J. and R. Tonson, C. Corbet, H. Woodfall, J. Rivington, R. Baldwin, L. Hawes, Clark and Collins, W. Johnston, T. Caslon. T. Lownds, and the executors of B. Dodd.
Shakespeare, W., Edwards, P., & Shakespeare, W. (1985). Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press.
Shapiro, J., & White, W. (1990). “Atttitudes and perceptions toward reading in traditional and nontraditional reading programs”. Reading Research and Instruction. Reading Research and Instruction 30: 52–66.
Ziming, L. (2005). “Reading behavior in the digital environment: Changes in reading behavior over the past ten years”. Journal of Documentation 61: 700–713.