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         Age Of Exploration Elizabethans:     more detail
  1. Sir Walter Raleigh: Being a True and Vivid Account of the Life and Times of the Explorer, Soldier, Scholar, Poet, and Courtier--The Controversial Hero of the Elizabethan Age by Raleigh Trevelyan, 2004-10-01

21. Encyclopedia: Elizabethan Age
It was an age of expansion and exploration abroad, while at home the Protestant Reformationwas established Elizabethan theatre Notable elizabethans.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Elizabethan-Age

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    Encyclopedia : Elizabethan Age
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    The Elizabethan Era is the period associated with the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558 - 1603) and is often considered to be a golden age in English history . It was the height of the Renaissance in England , and saw the flowering of English literature . It was an age of expansion and exploration abroad, while at home the

    22. Shakespeare [Beyond Books]
    elizabethans did not watch the plays purely for entertainment anxieties, and legaldisputes of the age shaped the Elsinore for an indepth exploration of Romeo
    http://www.beyondbooks.com/sha91/index.asp
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    Shakespeare's London
    The Renaissance Stage
    Politics and Power
    Reading Shakespeare
    Romeo and Juliet : What's Going On?
    Romeo and Juliet : Themes
    Use of Language and Speeches
    Romeo and Juliet in Performance and Study
    Hamlet : Structure and Background Hamlet : Themes and Imagery Hamlet : Character Studies Hamlet : Critical Scenes and Speeches Search BB Program Contents Page Shakespeare [Introduction] 1. Shakespeare's London 1a. Social Classes 1b. Religion and Church 1c. Who Was Shakespeare? 1d. Economy 1e. Medicine 1f. Women 2. The Renaissance Stage 2a. The Evolution of Theater 2b. The Theater in Society 2c. The Globe and Its Neighbors 2d. Actors 2e. Companies 2f. Gender 2g. Scenery 2h. The Experience of Watching a Play 3. Politics and Power 3a. The Tudors and The Stuarts 3b. Queen Elizabeth I 3c. King James I 3d. Laws of the Day 3e. War and Peace 3f. Lineage and Succession 4. Reading Shakespeare 4a. Shakespearean Sources 4b. Mythological References 4c. Is This English?

    23. Ron Heisler - John Dee And The Secret Societies
    give to the secret society culture of the late elizabethans. a practical man whoorganized programmes of exploration. a man of ripe and perfect age , who did
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/1896/johndee.html
    John Dee and the Secret Societies
    Ron Heisler
    from The Hermetic Journal 1992
    Man of science and magus extraordinary, and for two decades England's leading mathematician, it is only in recent years that John Dee's reputation has begun to properly recover from the obloquy attached by an age of militant rationalism to those notorious angel raising episodes in which he engaged in the 1580s. Meric Casaubon's poisonous 1659 edition of Dee's angelic diaries, which did not include all extant volumes, leaves us with little more than an impression of a rather pathetic Dee seeking to communicate with angelic spirits with frustratingly meagre results. What I am seeking to identify is the political and religious significance of these episodes and the clues they give to the secret society culture of the late Elizabethans.
    Dee's religious views have always been irritatingly opaque. That he was a Protestant of some sort is beyond dispute. In the time of Edward VI he associated with reformers. The curious affair in the reign of Catholic Queen Mary, when, during investigation by the Court of Requests (a committee of the Star Chamber) in 1555, he was accused of casting horoscopes of the Queen and her Spanish husband with evil intent, is ambiguous, for some of his companions in this possibly criminal venture subsequently proved lackeys of the Catholic monarchy of the most loyal kind. In any case, Dee was released, the official suspicions presumably dispelled. 1
    savant Hubert Languet, written from Antwerp, where Languet was a guest of the printer, Christopher Plantin, today the best remembered of all Familists. 4 Dee's greatest patron was Queen Elizabeth, and it has been surprisingly uncommented upon that after her death she was accused of being a favourer of the sect. 5

    24. Research On Ancient Celts
    The elizabethans and the Irish by David Beers Quinn of those currently faddish, cobbledtogether New age warm fuzzy who wants to do their own exploration of the
    http://www.geocities.com/mikerdna/celtic.html
    Return to Academic Research Home Page
    Research on Ancient Celts
    Now we enter that topic of the ancient Celts.
    • First off, don't read any books before 1950, unless you are interested in Antiquarianism (p.s. many of these outdated books are being deceptively republished without changes).
    • Second, read the hard stuff first. Then, if you like, wander into the interpretations.
    • Third, always check their sources, many authors inadvertantly base their works on discredited sources.
      IMPORTANT NOTE We have read almost all of the following books, and are in the process of procuring them for the Gould Library of Carleton College (the seminary of the Reformed Druids). As is always the case, your local library can often BORROW books from bigger libraries, so you needn't always purchase the books. However, I would recommend that you check the book carefully for poor scholarship before using them and send your opinions to hachimike@hotmail.com Be sure to check out the Celtic Links page. First a short version of the titles followed by a detailed list of the contents, ordering information, book descriptions and reader reviews
      Recommended Books only by Title
      Celtic History and Archaeology
    • The Celtic World : An Illustrated History 700 B. C. to the Present

    25. Rlist01
    II. age OF exploration AND COLONIZATION. * Samuel 1991). JA Parry, THE age OFRECONNAISSANCE (1963). 1763. AL Rowse, THE elizabethans IN AMERICA.
    http://www.larrywilliamson.net/rlist01.html
    BIBLIOGRAPHY/READING LIST - PART ONE # = Owned by the GHS Library
    * = Especially good selection by a good author and, in some cases, slightly more difficult and therefore carries more "credit." MAKING USE OF A NEW WORLD - 1492 TO 1649 I. AMERICAN INDIANS Kenneth MacGowan and J.A. Hester, Jr., EARLY MAN IN THE NEW WORLD (1950). *H.E. Driver, INDIANS OF NORTH AMERICA (Second ed.,1970). * Gary B. Nash, RED, WHITE, AND BLACK: THE PEOPLES OF EARLY AMERICA (1974). * W.E. Washburn, THE INDIAN IN AMERICA (1975). A.W. Crosby, Jr., THE COLOMBIAN EXCHANGE: BIOLOGICAL AND CULTURAL CONSEQUENCES OF 1492 (1972). # Powers, INDIANS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS. # Silverberg, THE MOUND BUILDERS. E. Huntington, RED MAN'S CONTINENT. H.I. Priestly, THE COMING OF THE WHITE MAN, 1492-1848. Francis Jennings, THE INVASION OF AMERICA (1975) [the coming of the white man]. James Axtell, THE INVASION WITHIN: THE CONTEST OF CULTURES IN COLONIAL AMERICA (1985). Brian M. Fagan, THE GREAT JOURNEY: THE PEOPLING OF ANCIENT AMERICA (1987). Karen Kupperman, SETTLING WITH THE INDIANS: THE MEETING OF ENGLISH AND INDIAN CULTURES IN AMERICA, 1580-1640 (1980).

    26. Elizabeth And A Weakened Historical Sense - A Review By David Walsh - Elizabeth,
    Each exploration of this age is at least in part an the figure of Elizabeth and toher age, and perhaps Of course, we and the elizabethans share many elemental
    http://www.wsws.org/arts/1998/dec1998/eliz-d03.shtml
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    Elizabeth and a weakened historical sense
    A review by David Walsh Elizabeth , directed by Shekhar Kapur, written by Michael Hirst
    3 December 1998 The story of Elizabeth I of England (1533-1603) is a remarkable one. Here is a woman not merely surviving in a cruel and treacherous age, but leaving her mark on one of the most extraordinary periods in English and modern world history. While the social struggle is the driving force of historical development, human beings are not thereby turned into ciphers, passive and anonymous "expressions" of class interests. What individuals do at critical moments has consequences. So Elizabeth intrigues us. It is natural that artists, as well as historians, should desire to explore her motives, her interests, her feelings. And there is the more general fascination with the English Renaissance and its exceptional array of personalities: Elizabeth's longtime adviser William Cecil (later Lord Burghley), the philosopher and statesman Francis Bacon, the adventurer and poet Walter Raleigh, the admiral and explorer Francis Drake, the poet, courtier, soldier and statesman Philip Sidney, the dramatist and poet Ben Jonson, the dramatist and poet Christopher Marlowe, and countless othersscientists, mathematicians, composers. And, above all, in the latter part of Elizabeth's reign, William Shakespeare. Each exploration of this age is at least in part an attempt to come to terms with, if not offer an explanation for, Shakespeare's personality and genius.

    27. Three Historic Horoscopes
    and plenty at home and of exploration, adventure and middle Tudor period, followedthe golden age of England the overseas activities of the elizabethans paid no
    http://www.homeoint.org/morrell/astrology/3charts.htm
    main THREE HISTORIC HOROSCOPES:
    VINCENT VAN GOGH, KING HENRY VIII AND QUEEN ELIZABETH I
    by Peter Morrell These three horoscopes illustrate very nicely the diversity of planetary phenomena and how they can be interpreted by an astrologer to give remarkable insights into the lives and minds of the figures concerned. Vincent Van Gogh The son of a preacher, Van Gogh was born on 30 March 1853 on the Belgium-Holland border [Groot-Zundert]; at 11am in the chart I have [source: 'The Book of the Zodiac' c.1972]. He has 22 deg Cancer on the ascendant, which is a degree common amongst artists [Salvador Dali also has it; Leonardo had Uranus in the same degree]. He also has 4 planets in fire and 3 in earth signs, depicting the active and practical 'fire-earth type' so common amongst artists. He has 5 planets in mutable signs depicting a desire to blend in and adapt to his surroundings rather than to dominate them.
      'An unrequited love affair with an English schoolmistress accentuated his inferiority complex and religious passion... [he] trained unsuccessfully to become a Methodist preacher. In 1878 he became an evangelist for a religious society [in Belgium]... he practised the Christian virtues with great zeal, sleeping on the floor of a derelict hut and giving away all his possessions.' [Chamber's, p.1496]
    The 1850s movement of Saturn, Uranus and Pluto through Taurus is of great interest. Taurus being regarded as the main sign of art, it shows new revolutionary skills and ideas in art; and a new tradition [Uranus] being established to embellish the old [Saturn]. The revolution referred to was probably Impressionism:

    28. St. Ives Historical Society - Bookliste
    The age of Elizabeth, by DM Palliser (Longmans in the history of Elizabethan seamanshipand exploration. in some ways even the poorest elizabethans were as rich
    http://www.saintives.com/booklist.htm
    A Bookliste of interest to the Scholar
    wherein reviews of many works may be found
    here are hundreds of books on the Elizabethan era, and a person casually interested in the time period can be forgiven for not knowing where to start. The following are some references for both general and more specific aspects of Elizabethan life and society. An asterisk (*) before a selection indicates that the volume is in the St. Ives Library and available for loan to interested parties. All others are in the collection of our members, and may be loaned or copied by arrangement. We accept donations to the St. Ives Book Fund as an outreach program to schools and educational groups; you can find out more about the Fund - here Unless otherwise noted, all reviews were written by Richard Foss. If you would like to contribute a review to this listing, please contact the Webmaster The St. Ives Historical Society maintains this list in association with

    29. AFRO-AMERICAN ALMANAC - African-American History Resource
    of selfrestraint and social discipline and an age of adventure, exploration, anddiscovery. and settlement overseas, as represented by elizabethans such as
    http://www.toptags.com/aama/voices/commentary/racismorigin.htm

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    YOUR INTERNET RESOURCE FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY
    RED, WHITE, AND BLACK

    The Origins of Racism in Colonial America By Gary B. Nash
    Racial attitudes in America have their origins in the culture of Eliza-bethan England, for it was in the closing decades of the sixteenth century that the English people, who were on the verge of creating an overseas em-pire in North America and the Caribbean, began to come into frequent contact with peoples whose culture, religion, and color was markedly dif-ferent from their own. In the early responses of Englishmen to Indians and Africans lay the seeds of what would become, four centuries later, one of the most agonizing social problems in American historythe problem of racial prejudice. Englishmen did not arrive at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607, or at Ply-mouth, Massachusetts, in 1620, with minds barren of images and precon-ceptions of the native occupiers of the land. A mass of reports and stories concerning the Indians of the New World, many of them based upon the Spanish and Portuguese experience in Mexico, Peru, and Brazil, were avail-able in printed form or by word of mouth for curious Englishmen crossing the Atlantic. From this literature ideas and fantasies concerning the Indians gradually entered the English consciousness. These early accounts seem to have created a split image of the Indian in the English mind. On the one hand, the native was imagined to be a savage, hostile, beast-like creature who inhabited the animal kingdom rather than the kingdom of men. In 1585, prospective adventurers to the New World could read one description of the natives of North America which depicted them as naked, lascivious individuals who cohabited "like beasts without any reasonableness." Another account described them as men who "spake such speech that no men could understand them, and in their demeanor like to brute beastes."

    30. Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806-1859)
    Clothes were an important status symbol to the elizabethans and it was thereforenecessary for Expert seamanship saw an age of discovery and exploration.
    http://www.ringwood.hants.sch.uk/subjects/library/libwebsite/gb1.htm

    31. LPC Library Annotated List Of Shakespeare Materials
    exploration of childhood, siblilng rivalry, courtship, the competition of Essayson Shakespeare and Other elizabethans. the page, and the age, the domains
    http://lpc1.clpccd.cc.ca.us/lpc/lrc/shakespe.html
    Las Positas College Library
    Information
    Quick Links Library Catalog Site Map ... Internet Links
    Las Positas College Library
    Annotated List of Shakespeare Materials
    Life and Times Shakespeare's life and Elizabethan England Elizabethan Theater Theater of the age, not only Shakespeare's dramas Works Plays and poetry in written format Media Presentations Videorecordings, cassettes and records of Shakespeare's works. Criticism and Study Aids Critical analyses of the plays and books essential to the study of Shakespeare such as a concordance or Shakespeare dictionary Producing and Performing Shakespeare Titles dealing specifically with staging a Shakespeare production today Shakespearean Internet Resources Sites dealing with Shakespeare and Elizabethan England. This is a list of works by or about William Shakespeare owned by the Learning Resource Center of Las Positas College. Some of the books are reference books (indicated by "Ref" in the call number) and may be used only in the Learning Resource Center. All the others may be checked out. Some of the items are non-print materials separately listed under Media Presentations by videorecordings, cassettes, and records. The bibliography is divided into six sections. Click on an section to go to that part of the bibliography.

    32. Merrie England
    Renaissance—and for literature, the glorious “age of Shakespeare in 1601, JamesI encouraged learning, exploration, and trade. elizabethans entering midlife.
    http://www.fourthturning.com/html/merrie_england.html
    Merrie England First Turning, 1594-1621 ) was an age of optimism and prosperity, full of dreams of empire yet tempered by a wariness of enemies abroad. For the arts, this was the true English Renaissance—and for literature, the glorious “Age of Shakespeare.” After succeeding Elizabeth in 1601, James I encouraged learning, exploration, and trade. His elaborately polite relations with the Commons began to wear thin late in the second decade of his reign.
      Reprisal entering elderhood Elizabethans entering midlife Parliamentarians entering young adulthood Puritans entering childhood Quicktakes offers a brief overview of topics referred to throughout the site. Please use your browsers back button to return to your previous location.

    33. Mybooks
    The Pharaohs Egyptian Jewellery Elizabethan, Captive Princess elizabethans EnemyIn The Gospel According To Peanuts The Great age Of exploration The Great
    http://members.lycos.co.uk/coriantumr/mybooks.html
    These are just a few of my books.
    If there is anything of intrerest to you in the titles then e-mail me with any questions.
    1000 Handy Household Hints
    10001 Wonderful Things
    1992 Changing Seasons
    365 Things To Know
    49 Irish Songs
    555 Fabulous Cross Stitch Patterns
    88 Hints For Cat Lovers
    8-Colour Country Cross Stitch
    A Book of Myths A Complete Guide To Heraldry A Dictionary Of Quotations A Dinner Of Herbs A First Book Of French Oral Teaching A Handbook Of Musical Knowledge A History Of England A Laodicean A Light Shines A Light Unto The Way A Marvelous Work And A Wonder A New Book Of Alphabets A Plain Man In The Holy Land A Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man A Short History Of Music A Tale of Two Cities A Text Book Of Physiology A Victorian Flower Album A Victorian Sunday Accupressure Adam the Gardener Africa's Rift Valley Against The Law Alec Green Alexander's Cordell's Novels of Wales Alexander's Hymns No 2 Alexander's Hymns No 3 Alice's Adventures In Wonderland All About Building Your Own Projector All In A Month Alphabets At Work Alphabets Old And New An Anthology of Humorous Verse An Anthology of Verse For Children An Author's Guide To Publishing An Introduction To The Bible Anatomy Of Lettering Ancient Egypt Anglo-Saxon England Antiques Roadshow Archeology and the Book of Mormon Architectural Styles Articles Of Faith Artist Without Hands As Others See Us Astronomical Discovery Astronomy Factfinder At Home With Cross Stitch

    34. Films For The Humanities And Sciences - Catalog Collection
    An Interactive exploration of Women in the Middle ages and of the lasting achievementsof the age of Charles and After (19011939) The elizabethans (1558-1603
    http://www.films.com/Films_Home/Products.cfm?s=1&category_id=253&description=EUR

    35. Love's Labor's Lost
    If elizabethans saw the cultural celebrities of their age in the These young menare at the beginning of their intellectual exploration and so
    http://www.shakespearedc.org/pastprod/lovessay.html
    Love's Labor's Lost
    January 31 to March 19, 1995 Lost and Found The story is a simple one. Three young men under the tutelage of the King pledge themselves to academic pursuits to the exclusion of good food, a good night's sleep and women. Into the King's garden come, of course, four women-the Princess and her retinue. The rest follows as one would imagine; each of the men falls in love with a different woman, making a perfect eightsome. After reckoning with their self-imposed chastity and abandoning it, the men must then deal with the clever rebukes of their female visitors. The play is animated not so much by its modest plot, nor even by character, but by language. It is rich in rhymed verse, wordplay, witty badinage (matched only by the repartee of Beatrice and Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing ) and sonnets. The extraordinary octet has the wit and learning of erudite youths, the grace of Elizabethan nobility and the poetic vitrosity of, well, Shakespeare. Into the mix, the playwright adds three other groups of characters, all largely defined by language. The pedant Holofernes and the curate Nathaniel with their Latinate quibbles, ad nauseam; the romantic Spaniard Don Armado and his Sancho Panza, Moth; and the aptly named Constable Dull and the rustic Costard who stumble over the banter of their more educated comrades.

    36. James Morgan Hart (1884-85)
    But when, by dint of patient exploration, we have struggled is a gulf between himand the meanest of the great elizabethans. So far as he is of any age and not
    http://social.chass.ncsu.edu/wyrick/debclass/hart.htm
    James Hart, "The College Course in English Literature, How it May Be Improved" (1884)
  • How is this amount of time to be best utilized? I confess that at more than one point I am in doubt; at least, my past experience is still to some extent only experimental.
  • To my way of thinking, the study of English literature means the study of the great movement of English life and feeling, as it is reflected in the purest prose of representative men; those men who have led their people's sympathies. Rhetoric always savors to me of the school-bench. It is, if we look into it scrutinizingly, little more than verbal jugglery. And however clever we may be at it ourselves, however quick we may be at perceiving it in others, we shall be none the wiser in understanding an author, the influences that moulded him, his peculiar mission, his hold upon us. The proper object of literary study, in one word, is to train us to read , to grasp an author's personality in all its bearings. And the less rhetoric here, the better in my judgment. Rhetorical exercises are, of course, useful. So are the parallel bars and dumb-bells of a gymnasium. Need I push the comparison farther?
  • In the next place, how is it with Anglo-Saxon and early English? I think that here most of us have confounded two radically distinct matters, vis., literature and language. Literature is thought. Were, now, the connection of thought between our King Alfred of pious memory and our Queen Victoria an unbroken continuity, I could spare my time. I should say at once, unhesitatingly, that it would be our duty to master
  • 37. Science News - 2003
    Books for every interest including space exploration, evolution, the in many womenover the age of 70 16 October 2003 elizabethans The FourLetter-Word Champs
    http://www.scienceagogo.com/news/science_news_2003.shtml
    Welcome to Science a GoGo, where you can
    activate your brain with the latest science news,
    offbeat research, scientific hot topics, bizarre
    research findings, cryptic experimental results and the
    liveliest science discussion forum on the Internet. Home
    Back to the home page. Discussion Forum Science discussion, science waffle and science brouhaha from assorted boffins. Hot Topics News Archive Search Science Books Books for every interest including space exploration, evolution, the philosophy of science, nature and physics. Science Shopping Lego
    For budding boffins
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    Flight suits, toys, models, astronaut gear Science Toys Great fun and educational Dinosaurs Dinosaur everything! Science News 2003 Here's the full list of all the science news articles to appear on Science a GoGo in 2003. 29 December 2003 Memory Linked To Mad Cow Mechanism A prion-like protein may be the storage mechanism that the brain uses to retain memories... 22 December 2003 Human - Chimp Differences A Matter Of Lifestyle Chimpanzees and humans share 99% of their genetic makeup apart from key differences in the way we perceive smells and what we eat...

    38. Rose Consort Of Viols, Programmes 2004
    The elizabethans exposed themselves to melancholy as a way An exploration of someof the connections between song music in that truly Golden age of Elizabethan
    http://earlymusic.users.btopenworld.com/rose/programmes.html
    Programmes
    www.roseconsort.co.uk
    ‘Trickling Tears and Ruthless Rage’ a new programme for 2004:
    dramatic songs and consort music from the Elizabethan theatre.
    Flights of Fancy: The flowering of the English Viol Consort
    A programme which covers the long tradition of consort-playing at the English court, ranging from some of the repertory which might have been suitable for Henry VIII's viol consort through to its last flowering in the hands of the young Purcell.
    4 viols
    Passionate Pavans and Farewell Fancies
    Music from the last days of the English viol consort, including majestic pavans and fantasias by composers such as Jenkins, Tomkins, Lawes and Purcell. This programme could include a performance of Ivan Moody's Farewell for Viols (1993) specially written for the Rose Consort, or this could be replaced with further Jacobean music.
    5 viols
    Hoe, who comes here?
    A celebration of the music of Thomas Morley to mark the 400th anniversary of his death in 1602, interspersed with readings from his 'A Plaine and Easie Introduction to Practicall Musicke', together with songs, fantasias and dances by his teacher William Byrd and his Elizabethan colleagues.
    5 viols and soprano
    Evenly, Softly, and Sweetly Acchording to All

    39. Gc: Beacon Pages
    be seen as being identified with both versions of this age of exploration thoseof his incredulity (which would be shared by most elizabethans) that this
    http://www.greenhead.ac.uk/beacon/english/othello_four_docs.htm
    OTHELLO Four documents: Venice 'Othello', Elizabethan England and the Question of Race Tragedy - a brief introduction Othello as tragic hero Venice the famous and renowned city of the Venetians, which, although it is completely set in the sea, yet by the name of its beauty and the merit of its elegance it could be set between the star Arcturus and the shining Pleiades In honour of [St Mark] ....is a most sumptuous church, built incomparably of marble and other valuable stones, and excellently adorned and worked with Bible stories in mosaic Opposite it is that public square which all things considered has no equal anywhere. To this church is joined almost continuously that famous palace of the Duke of Venice, in which are fed at all times live lions for the glory of the state and the magnificence of its citizens. And opposite this palace near the harbour are two round marble columns, large and high, on the top of one of which, for their

    40. Courses Drama
    The Middle ages, the elizabethans and Jacobeans (excluding of worldwide culture sinceat least the Paleolithic age. exploration of the director s task in its
    http://www.ucalendar.uwaterloo.ca/nextcalendar/COURSE/course-DRAMA.html
    Undergraduate Calendar 2005-2006
    UW HOME CONTENTS NEXT PAGE PREVIOUS PAGE ... UP D R A M A
    Note
    Laboratory sessions and rehearsal periods may be added to any course at the discretion of the instructor.
    DRAMA 100s
    DRAMA 101A LEC 0.50
    Course ID: 004660 Introduction to the Theatre 1 Introductory study of the theatre as a major art form. Selected plays as produced in their historical contexts. Contributions of the actor, designer and technician to theatrical production.
    DRAMA 101B LEC 0.50 Course ID: 004661 Introduction to the Theatre 2 An extension of the studies described in 101A.
    DRAMA 102 LAB 0.50 Course ID: 004662 Introduction to Performance Designed for majors in Drama and in Speech Communication, this workshop introduces the student to the tools of performance. Students will gain confidence through individual and group exercises in physical and emotional awareness, improvisational skills, scene study, character creation and voice. [Note: Must attend first class.] Coreq: DRAMA 101A or 101B
    DRAMA 200s
    DRAMA 221 LAB 0.50

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