Ghosts, Murder, and More Murder - Hamlet Part 1: Crash Course Literature 203

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  • Опубликовано: 12 мар 2014
  • In which John Green teaches you about Hamlet, William Shakespeare's longest and most-performed play. People love Hamlet. The play that is, not necessarily the character. Hamlet is a Tragedy with a capital T (I guess I don't have to point that out since you can see clearly in the text that the T was capitalized). By Tragedy, I mean virtually everyone dies at the end. John will talk a little bit about the history of the play and the different versions of it that have appeared in the centuries since it was written. You'll also learn about some of the big themes in the play, get a brief plot overview, and the all-important connections between Prince Hamlet and Simba, the Lion King. Seriously though, The Lion King is totally just a Hamlet musical with animals instead of people.
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @shaunaaaah
    @shaunaaaah 10 лет назад +2387

    He was a student, of course he'd procrastinate until the last moment.

  • @RenardeBlanche
    @RenardeBlanche 10 лет назад +2157

    To paraphrase a former high school English classmate of mine, Hamlet comes home from university and finds his father dead and his mother married to his uncle. Worst... spring break... ever.

    • @kiraricarte5801
      @kiraricarte5801 6 лет назад +15

      RenardeBlanche John Green was just saying something like that when I read your comment. Oh poor Hamlet. 😅

    • @jazzinikki01
      @jazzinikki01 5 лет назад +7

      Dang 😂

  • @ipovaric
    @ipovaric 8 лет назад +1126

    I never read hamlet in school, so the revelation that the Lion King is basically a modern animated version of Hamlet just...blew my mind.

    • @2b-coeur
      @2b-coeur 7 лет назад +41

      A modern version... thankfully without all the, you know, literally everybody dying in the end. But yeah, I never realized that either!

    • @Weronika-ev4gp
      @Weronika-ev4gp 6 лет назад +33

      Sth to blow your mind once again: kinda seems that Lion King 2 must be Romeo and Juliet than :D

    • @splabbity
      @splabbity 5 лет назад +26

      Timoncrantz and Puumbanstern??

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU 5 лет назад +10

      @@2b-coeur It's not an adaption, it simply uses the architecture and turns it into a bouncy castle. Hamlet is much, much better.

    • @hanro50
      @hanro50 5 лет назад +7

      It is a ripoff of a ripoff of Hamlet...
      Its based on an anime, that Disney did the English dub for I believe, about a lion...
      The plot is the same plot as the Lion king I believe. Just stretched across several seasons...

  • @RMoribayashi
    @RMoribayashi 8 лет назад +366

    I always took Hamlet's delay as quite logical. How can he kill the King and survive (and not burn in Hell), as well as retrieve his rightful position as King? He tries his best to get evidence but in the end realizes there is no way. He finally has clear cause for revenge only after he has been poisoned. This finally frees him to act, confidant he has justice (and hopefully God) on his side.

  • @ethanthompson3198
    @ethanthompson3198 7 лет назад +1278

    I wish they'd just go ahead and make a crash course Shakespeare

  • @hollyanne4562
    @hollyanne4562 9 лет назад +1861

    Hamlet was an emo before it was cool...

    • @gregheffley4830
      @gregheffley4830 8 лет назад +52

      Being an emo is never cool

    • @hollyanne4562
      @hollyanne4562 8 лет назад +6

      OOOOOOOOOHHH!

    • @KajiRider1997
      @KajiRider1997 8 лет назад +7

      +Dick ‘Nightwing’ Grayson WILL YOU PLEASE TELL THAT TO DAMIEN ALREADY I MEAN DAMN THAT KID IS A PIECE OF PLYWOOD WITH EMO AL GHUL WRITTEN ON IT.

    • @rubiedoll511
      @rubiedoll511 7 лет назад

      Josh Kelley damnit I was gonna say that XD

    • @ishmaelforester9825
      @ishmaelforester9825 5 лет назад +4

      Hamlet wasn't an emo lol. Hamlet was a devious ruthless tragic bastard. He wasn't an emo.

  • @dangvy7022
    @dangvy7022 9 лет назад +402

    I actually laughed like hell when he said: "to die, to sleepe, IS THAT ALL??" haha so funny.

  • @MustafaKulle
    @MustafaKulle 8 лет назад +472

    Bring back Crash Course Literature please.

    • @minimooster7258
      @minimooster7258 8 лет назад +3

      GOOD NEWS! Its coming!

    • @minimooster7258
      @minimooster7258 8 лет назад +2

      +Collin Barry Kamp I saw John tell someone on a vlogbrothers video, I think. I can't really remember.

    • @minimooster7258
      @minimooster7258 8 лет назад +1

      ***** they put up a video on it a few days ago :)

  • @CB-sk1pq
    @CB-sk1pq 9 лет назад +510

    To be, or not to be, that's the point, to die, to sleepe, IS THAT ALL?

    • @MrGhaundan
      @MrGhaundan 9 лет назад +46

      Reawaken :3 I couldn't help think that last part was a question the actor told himself, while scratching his perpelxed head.

    • @evaburnz
      @evaburnz 9 лет назад +4

      MrGhaundan told himself or asked himself?

    • @MrGhaundan
      @MrGhaundan 9 лет назад +9

      Eva Burnz Asked himself. Like someone was typing it while he recited it and then musing to himself asking "was that all?"

    • @ishmaelforester9825
      @ishmaelforester9825 5 лет назад

      @@MrGhaundan It's Will Shakespeare, so you cannot ignore the sense of humour. Gotta love the idea of people finding that especially profound. Shakespeare, a true master of poetry, was laughing his head off. 'To be or not to be...' lol.

    • @ishmaelforester9825
      @ishmaelforester9825 5 лет назад

      People read and perform Shakespeare more or less seriously, which is an egregious error. He is full of ale and fun.

  • @Redem10
    @Redem10 10 лет назад +821

    I wonder if Shakespeare ever sat through a six hours version of his own work

    • @EmperorTikacuti
      @EmperorTikacuti 10 лет назад +17

      He is famous and if he was alive, I hope he's not like what people are nowadays.

    • @TimothyFerguson
      @TimothyFerguson 10 лет назад +81

      Well, he ran a theatre, so you'd think he did.

    • @MrsCharader
      @MrsCharader 10 лет назад +79

      He actually played Hamlet's ghost in a production of it. He played minor roles in several of his plays.

  • @emilybackscheider7922
    @emilybackscheider7922 5 лет назад +55

    "To be, or not to be: that's the point
    To die, to sleep...is that all?"
    Dying of laughter! 😂😂😂

  • @Duneyrr
    @Duneyrr 10 лет назад +86

    I remember watching 'The Lion King' with my parents when it came out and my mom sitting next to me saying, "Isn't this Hamlet?"

  • @KannaJuwl
    @KannaJuwl 10 лет назад +80

    Oh man, I have to imagine that having John Green as a teacher would be both awesome and full of information.

    • @aarondunn6759
      @aarondunn6759 10 лет назад +9

      For a teacher, I'd go for Stephen Fry, personnaly

  • @RoonMian
    @RoonMian 8 лет назад +275

    Good thinking of old Bill to change the name of the protagonist from "Omelette" to "Hamlet"

    • @andrew5254
      @andrew5254 6 лет назад +12

      I sincerely hope that was a Something Rotten reference.

    • @lisachong7480
      @lisachong7480 6 лет назад

      I've just discovered this section of Crash Course, and I'm watching this to distract myself from doing my Literature homework (which, ironically, is about doing research on yet another one of Shakespeare's plays).
      And then I see this. If that was indeed a Something Rotten reference, then I absolutely platonically love you for it.

    • @renzhimcgrew1614
      @renzhimcgrew1614 6 лет назад +5

      I got excited too for the Something a Rotten reference but the Prince’s name was actually Amleth which sounds a whole lot like omelet but is not. Hence him saying it was 80% of the way to pig latin for “Hamlet”

  • @jorge9285
    @jorge9285 9 лет назад +129

    you didnt acknowledge that timone and pumbaa are interpretations of rosencrantz and guildenstern

  • @HamzaSayedAli
    @HamzaSayedAli 10 лет назад +231

    How is John from the past wearing a The Fault in Our Stars shirt if he's in the past? It only came out 2 years ago.

    • @crashcourse
      @crashcourse  10 лет назад +221

      Please refer time travel paradoxes to Hank and the science people. -stan

    • @HamzaSayedAli
      @HamzaSayedAli 10 лет назад +26

      So I've thought about it and have come up with several possible explanations. (In increasing order of probability) A. John is an incarnation of the Doctor in Timeord form. This one is unlikely because it would mean that John would either have to go back in his own timeline to give the shirt to his earlier self which is dangerous on its own or go forward in his own timeline to get the shirt which may be problematic and just seems pointless. B. John is an incarnation of the Doctor in human form and his Spanish TFiOS shirt is his version of the fob watch and has a perception filter on it which would explain why he did not recognize it as being the cover of his book two years ago to the present. Finally the most probable theory C. John from the past is actually an actor portrayal of John from the past which removes the paradox in this whole discussion.
      P.S. If you don't watch Doctor Who, none of this will make any sense.

    • @TimothyFerguson
      @TimothyFerguson 10 лет назад +2

      QTHERESSERECTION We know he has a time machine from the Swindon Town videos...

    • @Ellyerre
      @Ellyerre 10 лет назад +18

      QTHERESSERECTION The TFiOS shirt is actually in Portuguese (it's the Brazilian cover of the book). As a Portuguese, it's really weird and awesome to see that cover in Portuguese, specially since the Portuguese cover is so different than the original, which is so much better.
      But I think you're right, John Green is probably a Time Lord but it's more probable that it's actually a dramatic portrayal of John from the past (hence his appearance in the end).

    • @tommymeyer8281
      @tommymeyer8281 8 лет назад +30

      +HamzaSayedAli Everyone knows that young John Green was a clairvoyant who was into shameless self promotion

  • @batturiebunnie6460
    @batturiebunnie6460 4 года назад +231

    you: Hamlet
    me, an intellectual: ໐๓ēlēt 👁️👄 👁️

  • @antizero100
    @antizero100 10 лет назад +198

    I thought he was saying Omelet

  • @katherinekunker1419
    @katherinekunker1419 9 лет назад +25

    I think my favorite experience in studying Hamlet (two springs in a row; first in my Senior Year of High school, the second in my second semester of college) is in watching the Kenneth Branaugh film, when my class LAUGHED when Polonius was killed. My professor actually paused in shock and asked why we laughed...
    Even I don't really know why, but I guess it was the old defense mechanism at how sudden and somewhat goofy the performance came off. That and the riffing in high school. "Trololol! I'm not Claudius! I'm Polonius!"
    My other favorite experience is when my youngest brother tried to convince me that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern didn't die. Ummm...no. I studied it twice in a row. They died. Trust me.

  • @CB-sk1pq
    @CB-sk1pq 9 лет назад +43

    Sell more mutton pies at the consession stand... the thought cafe animation of Shakespeare handing out pies is SO DAMN CUTE!

  • @isaiahtheraccoon8928
    @isaiahtheraccoon8928 7 лет назад +88

    As a professional stage actor, I think I can confidently say MOST stage actors are that actors mouthing everyone else's lines.

    • @abigaillangford3899
      @abigaillangford3899 5 лет назад +7

      Very true... Lol. After we'd been rehearsing for a while my director was like "Abbie, I know you don't know that you're doing this, but you're messing up all of our takes because you're mouthing other people's lines. Please stop." She looked a little exhausted lol

    • @johnfitzgeraldkennedy4465
      @johnfitzgeraldkennedy4465 4 года назад +2

      Abigail Langford lmao. Literally happened in the 3vocal rehearsals. To prevent this we had to spend a good 2 hours just for one line

  • @VideoNozoki
    @VideoNozoki 10 лет назад +34

    I liked this Crash Course Hamlet so much more than the Odyssey. This uses more specific examples, and I'm glad to see it is long and in two parts.
    Thanks John, really well done.

  • @markthe5hark8
    @markthe5hark8 8 лет назад +46

    A great post Hamlet reading is Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. It's smart, funny, and has really interesting and deep themes especially for how short it is. There's also a fun movie based on it. Seriously if you like literature check it out.

  • @bldmeals2187
    @bldmeals2187 9 лет назад +255

    wait the lion king is a retelling of Hamlet? -_- I never noticed that

    • @bldmeals2187
      @bldmeals2187 9 лет назад +16

      so it was a loose retelling

    • @guyguyton7086
      @guyguyton7086 7 лет назад +2

      yes it is and wow😒

    • @Weronika-ev4gp
      @Weronika-ev4gp 6 лет назад +12

      The Lion King 2 must be Romeo and Juliet lol

    • @brigittebedolla4719
      @brigittebedolla4719 4 года назад +2

      I believe that Lion King 2 is loosely based on R&J. Lion King 1 and a half is essentially Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. Someone at Disney REALLY likes their Shakespeare.

    • @Abcdefghijklmno4840
      @Abcdefghijklmno4840 4 года назад

      YEP!

  • @lcdstudios
    @lcdstudios 10 лет назад +8

    I hope that there's a bit more in-depth discussion about Ophelia's character next week. She is fascinating, and Gertrude's monologue in Act IV, scene vii describing how and where Ophelia died is one of the most amazing snippets of literature I have ever read.

    • @Pratchettgaiman
      @Pratchettgaiman 10 лет назад +1

      the preview image thingie for next week appears to be Ophelia lying in the water, so I'd say we're probably going to get some more of her. I'm hoping for more Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, myself

    • @mayanpaw
      @mayanpaw 10 лет назад

      Personally I'd like to explore Gertrude, but really any side characters would be great

    • @lcdstudios
      @lcdstudios 10 лет назад

      The supporting characters are one of the things I love about Shakespeare.

    • @anonov1
      @anonov1 10 лет назад

      mayanpaw That's a pleonasm....

  • @maidenlilylace
    @maidenlilylace Год назад +8

    "isn't it just like a super long play about a guy who never makes up his mind?" all I heard was my life summarized in 1 sentence

  • @jenniferkhoury4055
    @jenniferkhoury4055 8 лет назад +125

    Vote #scoobydoo for "The Greatest Dane"

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  10 лет назад +237

    In which John Green teaches you about Hamlet, William Shakespeare's longest and most-performed play. People love Hamlet. The play that is, not necessarily the character. Hamlet is a Tragedy with a capital T (I guess I don't have to point that out, since you can see clearly in the text that the T was capitalized). By Tragedy, I mean virtually everyone dies at the end. John will talk a little bit about the history of the play and the different versions of it that have appeared in the centuries since it was written. You'll also learn about some of the big themes in the play, get a brief plot overview, and the all important connections between Prince Hamlet and Simba, the Lion King. Seriously though, The Lion King is totally just a Hamlet musical with animals instead of people.
    Ghosts, Murder, and More Murder - Hamlet Part I: Crash Course Literature 203

    • @ejsorianoriz
      @ejsorianoriz 10 лет назад +3

      Great idea for the students!

    • @rafaelabreu2873
      @rafaelabreu2873 10 лет назад

      Make one video about the book "os Lusiadas" please

    • @TheFireflyGrave
      @TheFireflyGrave 9 лет назад +4

      John Green from the past is wearing a 'The Fault in our Stars' t-shirt. Time Paradox.

    • @raycsar
      @raycsar 9 лет назад +1

      .

    • @raycsar
      @raycsar 9 лет назад +1

      .

  • @ShubhamThakkarShubhavatar
    @ShubhamThakkarShubhavatar 10 лет назад +30

    Thank you crash course, you really did justice to hamlet by giving it more than one part!

  • @micaela303
    @micaela303 10 лет назад +10

    John Green is amazing. Author, crash course and lots more. This guy saved my ass in school and provided great books to write reports on. Thanks!

  • @DKlarations
    @DKlarations 10 лет назад +23

    I'm so glad this is being done in more than one part.

  • @PegasusPablo
    @PegasusPablo 10 лет назад +21

    Young John wearing a t-shirt with a sentence in Portuguese. Cool!

  • @nadiact-ie5hy
    @nadiact-ie5hy 10 лет назад +3

    Great video, John. I really liked how the RSC's production of Hamlet with David Tennant addressed the idea of surveillance. They chose to have a modern setting, and the characters used security cameras and one-way mirrors to spy on Hamlet. I also liked the PBS series "Shakespeare Uncovered." Tennant hosted the episode on Hamlet, and one of the things he talked about was how Hamlet was aware of the tragic revenge hero story, and how knowing he would probably die too if he killed his uncle affected his decisions.

  • @shessomickey
    @shessomickey 10 лет назад +41

    It is only right now that I noticed the link between "purgatory" and "purge." Some Catholic and student of Milton I am!

  • @gamergrl1357
    @gamergrl1357 7 лет назад +2

    I have an exam on this play in an hour, just found this video, I could cry with happiness

  • @NateDean8D
    @NateDean8D 10 лет назад +3

    Hamlet is my favourite play ever and I can't wait for next week's part two. I actually didnt notice the closeness of the Lion King to it though, which really shocked me.

  • @savannahs8914
    @savannahs8914 8 лет назад +36

    You guys should just do all of Shakespeare. Just do a Shakespeare crash course.

  • @schtroumpfsreveur
    @schtroumpfsreveur 10 лет назад +6

    I'm studying for my IB English exam and this is really helpful to refresh my memory of the play. Thank you very much John Green ! =D

  • @MrQuinnlord
    @MrQuinnlord 10 лет назад

    Oh my god, I dig the thought bubble. So immersive, with the visuals and audios - created a beautiful scene of denmark in just a few minutes.

  • @mariomarroquinvega
    @mariomarroquinvega 10 лет назад +1

    Probably my favorite crash course video yet. The world needs teachers like John Greene and CGP Grey

  • @TheShark657
    @TheShark657 7 лет назад +8

    Loving the Portuguese on John Green's top btw (even if it is just the translation of The Fault in Our Stars). Fun fact: it literally translates as "the fault is from the stars"

  • @Prophes0r
    @Prophes0r 10 лет назад +11

    Yeah...A lot of "Shakespeare's" work is unbelievably close to other works published shortly before his.
    In fact, it's interesting how you brought up The Lion King considering how close it is to Kimba the White Lion.

    • @Krystalcove
      @Krystalcove 10 лет назад +11

      Almost none of his works were original, in fact. But the thing is, that wasn't the point. It was about how he told it. Back then, they didn't care so much about the story being 100% original. That worry is a more modern one.

  • @EbonyEyedBrija
    @EbonyEyedBrija 9 лет назад +2

    Just like an earlier poster, I also noted John Green's anachronism of portraying his past self wearing merch from his present work which was translated to imply broad future consumption. Bravo.

  • @kaitlynrauch3454
    @kaitlynrauch3454 10 лет назад

    I'd like to say Thank you John. All of the books for this season of Crash Course I've already read at some point.

  • @taniwha7618
    @taniwha7618 9 лет назад +3

    this is amazing. i used it in an English internal and it was the main reason i passed and did well.....
    you are amazing John Green.... just amazing.......

  • @Corristo89
    @Corristo89 10 лет назад +13

    To really understand Shakespeare you need to understand history, especially the history of Elizabethan England and the mindset of people back then. Another taking the throne away from the natural heir was thought to upset the established order (As You Like It) and order had to be restored.

    • @TimothyFerguson
      @TimothyFerguson 10 лет назад

      Telling, given that the Queen had no natural heir. Thanks for this comment. I'd not thought of that angle before.

  • @ilove60s1
    @ilove60s1 8 лет назад +1

    I don't know how to thank you guys for what you do. You are changing the world bit by bit and I enjoy every single one your videos. Simply put, I love you guys at CrashCourse ❤️

  • @TeamStew
    @TeamStew 4 года назад

    We are using this video as a reference in a theatre appreciation course to help students understand hamlet before they go into it. I have always loved your content. So grateful for the value you all have brought to the world. Just... thank you.

  • @ForeverRepublic
    @ForeverRepublic 8 лет назад +30

    The Scottish Play is the best of Shakespeare in my opinion.

    • @bloodsucker1186
      @bloodsucker1186 8 лет назад +7

      You don't happen to mean MACBETH do you...

    • @minimooster7258
      @minimooster7258 8 лет назад +8

      +bloodsucker1186 **earthquake**

    • @methylphosphatePOET
      @methylphosphatePOET 8 лет назад +3

      +ForeverRepublic It definitely competes with Hamlet; I'll give it that -- along with Lear, which, interestingly enough, may be the more superior of the three.

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU 5 лет назад

      @@methylphosphatePOET I saw a musical interpretation of Macbeth once, produced by Mauro Pawlowski. I yet have to see another play that is just as epic as this version of Macbeth.

    • @williamdrouin8063
      @williamdrouin8063 4 года назад

      methylphosphatePOET Im not sure, the prodigious beauty of Hamlet is incomparable and inimitable. Hamlet is the greatest miracle in literature. But i agree, Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth and Othello are Shakespeare at his best. Im also quite fond The Tempest, even if it is artistically inferior to the four greatest tragedies. The Tempest could be called physics fiction (and not science fiction).

  • @daniellehall1857
    @daniellehall1857 5 лет назад +12

    "The Greatest Dane, Scooby Doo"
    Quality content.

  • @surrexi
    @surrexi 10 лет назад

    Loved the emphasis on surveillance and mirroring - that's one reason why the set design of the stage production of David Tennant's RSC run of Hamlet (which was a mirrored floor and a wall of mirrors which opened) and the integration of a ton of CCTV cameras in the filmed version were so brilliant to me. I also loved the shoutout to The Lion King - my favorite Disney movie (partially because Hamlet is my favorite Shakespeare play, lol).
    I think I have a new favorite Crash Course episode, too ;)

  • @Chemirina
    @Chemirina 9 лет назад +1

    Dear John Green! thank you very much for the Hamlet videos. They are a very big help to understand it or at least ask the right questions and to have the right ideas to think about. Thank you very very much! (even though I am not a native English speaker and had to watch the clips twice ^^)

  • @dalevlog
    @dalevlog 10 лет назад +14

    this is a highschool student's dream.. wish i had this when i was in high school...

  • @anne-mareegray8762
    @anne-mareegray8762 10 лет назад +6

    I know it is long, but I do love the Kenneth Branagh film version - it is so gorgeous.

    • @EmperorTikacuti
      @EmperorTikacuti 10 лет назад +1

      I didn't knew Robin Williams was in a romantic movie

    • @anne-mareegray8762
      @anne-mareegray8762 10 лет назад

      Leif Bradshaw my favourite celebrity appearance would have to be Charlton Heston, who seems not to realise that he could ever so gently be being sent up as the ham-fisted senior actor. The whole film is done in 70mm too. Sigh.

  • @SpoopyJD
    @SpoopyJD 10 лет назад +2

    This was perfectly timed! We are reading Hamlet in my Lit class, this helped a lot with the understanding of Shakespeare's use of English!

  • @zairamorales5051
    @zairamorales5051 10 лет назад

    I really like this video and not only because John Green is the narrator. John makes some really good points on what Shakespeare is trying to say and what was the overall concept of the play . He tells about how it is not only about Hamlet not being able to make up his mind , it's about executing his vision . I like how he said that hamlet is about watching and being watched , i never thought of that.

  • @SesshReincarnated
    @SesshReincarnated 10 лет назад +18

    Insincere endorsement: You have not experienced Shakespeare until you have heard him in the voice of elcor.

  • @Liliputian07
    @Liliputian07 9 лет назад +14

    It's sad how John Green seems to be really on top of literature...
    And wrote A Fault in Our Stars.
    Goddamn, that's a step, ain't it?

  • @balmylagoon
    @balmylagoon 10 лет назад

    Loved this! Hamlet is my favorite play from Shakespeare.

  • @ArsenicPoison123
    @ArsenicPoison123 10 лет назад +2

    THIS IS FANTASTIC. I have an AP Literature and Comp. test tomorrow over Hamlet and this totally saved my butt.

  • @cocoabean6180
    @cocoabean6180 8 лет назад +75

    When are you going to do Macbeth?

  • @estopasowner
    @estopasowner 10 лет назад +21

    Why does John Green from the past has a t-shirt of a book that John Green of the future wrote in the future? Does John Green has a time machine wich allows him to bring himself from the past to the future. So he could teach himself to stop being annoying and start being intelligent as the John Green that we know today? So what we're watching is not John Green talking to us but to himself. That makes perfect sense!

  • @RottenBumblebee
    @RottenBumblebee 6 лет назад

    Geeking out over the books on his desk... Kavalier and Clay, Titus Groan and Love in the Time of Cholera are three of my all time favorite books! It's so rare to find anyone who's read any Mervyn Peake.... John Green you are my bookish brainy crush forever!

  • @yabasta13
    @yabasta13 10 лет назад

    These newer videos have been amazing. I actually enjoy the literature episodes a tiny bit more than the history ones, but that's splitting hairs. Thanks for posting!

  • @phophia
    @phophia 8 лет назад +38

    Do Anna Karenina and 100 Years of Solitude :D

  • @Firmus777
    @Firmus777 10 лет назад +9

    7:41 I wonder what Hamlet and Pirates of the Caribbean would really look like.

  • @Thiefree
    @Thiefree 10 лет назад

    Loved this! Thank you all for making it.

  • @brendacasillas6274
    @brendacasillas6274 10 лет назад

    This viedo has been the best video explaining Hamlet, it goes so in depth and detailed about everything. Its weird to say it made me like Hamlet even more.The summary was brief and I would really recommend this to somone who doesn't understand Hamlet.For instance in this video make me understand why everyone was watching after everyone. Shakespeare made me wonder why he did what he did , including religion on his own in this story and question myself to thing differently and more about scenes.

  • @McJethroPovTee
    @McJethroPovTee 10 лет назад +15

    John green wearing a the fault in our stars tshirt

  • @ShaylaFitzpatrick
    @ShaylaFitzpatrick 10 лет назад +10

    If you say Hamlet in the Crash Course Indianapolis office does it count towards the staff pork chop fund? Because... ya know... ham?

  • @rosebaldwin5792
    @rosebaldwin5792 10 лет назад

    Awesome video, thank you for not over simplifying this brilliant play. :)

  • @ScathingSarcasm
    @ScathingSarcasm 10 лет назад

    I don't think I fully understood the story until this video - thanks John! Can't wait for part 2. :)

  • @FernandoOliveira-df1tv
    @FernandoOliveira-df1tv 10 лет назад +58

    THAT'S THE BRAZILIAN FAULT IN OUR STARS SHIRT. GOD.

    • @fictionmyth
      @fictionmyth 10 лет назад +9

      If an older version of yourself is wearing a shirt that is the cover art of a book you yourself will write, and it's in a different language. Does that mean your past self is a fan of your writings in Portuguese?

    • @sion8
      @sion8 10 лет назад

      Corey Carnes
      That was actually "Me from the past" wearing the t-shirt!

    • @fictionmyth
      @fictionmyth 10 лет назад

      I meant older as in past events older not as in age older. I realize it was an ambiguous statement and I apologize.

    • @sion8
      @sion8 10 лет назад

      Corey Carnes
      That is not an "ambiguous" state meant, it just doesn't makes sense if you don't say "past self". Things from the past are younger not older since they are in a past state, but when talked about later they are older; that is what make your statement not make sense at all.

    • @stranger2two
      @stranger2two 6 лет назад

      Yeah, the dude is the author actually :) I mean, FOR REAL, he wrote that book :)

  • @tkrepps317
    @tkrepps317 7 лет назад +4

    You should make a CrashCourse on Macbeth! (Because I am teaching it next semester and my students would love it. Also, I would love it.)

    • @fahm2328
      @fahm2328 7 лет назад

      Hello I need to Theme or things that are important to this play Hamlet because after two days in a very difficult test, and I need help ☹️💛💛.

  • @eldarauko
    @eldarauko 10 лет назад

    Dear Crash Course: I love these videos and I'm really happy that you're continuing this course, but I miss the old set with the chalkboard.

  • @rebeccarichards8069
    @rebeccarichards8069 10 лет назад

    I find it amazing how different your take on Hamlet was than how my senior English teacher saw it. And, also, I find it funny how u both sound so positive when contradicting each other :) Thanks for making me think more, John. I can't wait for next week!!!!

  • @ac14pc
    @ac14pc 10 лет назад +14

    How can John from the past have a TFiOS and why is it in Portuguese?

  • @TheRuggedPyrrhus
    @TheRuggedPyrrhus 9 лет назад +28

    I just made a video analyzing the character of Claudius. I hope that it will help some of you students preparing for exams!

    • @theaj7866
      @theaj7866 6 лет назад

      The Rugged Pyrrhus Sounds very interesting, I`ll ceck it out after the Crash Course Videos about Hamlet

  • @superdude4464
    @superdude4464 10 лет назад

    Hamlet is one of my favorite plays, along with A Streetcar Named Desire and Death of a Salesman.
    I'm so glad I was able to study this in Senior English.

  • @Michael-R
    @Michael-R 10 лет назад

    Very thought provoking open letter. Made me understand the text better.

  • @FluffRecordings
    @FluffRecordings 10 лет назад +7

    I saw that 7:06. Sneaky.

  • @LexBetty
    @LexBetty 9 лет назад +4

    Wait. How can John from the past have a Portuguese "A Fault in Our Stars" shirt if he has hadn't written it yet???

  • @LTdrumma
    @LTdrumma 6 лет назад

    Open letter is so good and concise in this one. Explains Lion King so quick

  • @sarahnguyentran3274
    @sarahnguyentran3274 10 лет назад +1

    literally reading this now for AP Lit, thank you thank you thank you!!!

  • @L33tH4ks
    @L33tH4ks 10 лет назад +6

    When will there be part 2???? This is awesome. (I have a test on this)

  • @hannahbrennan1408
    @hannahbrennan1408 8 лет назад +7

    I'm severely shocked that William Shakespeare did not write Bill and Teds Excellent Adventures

    • @treadtrick
      @treadtrick 8 лет назад

      +Hannah Brennan - That was the 17th Earl of Oxford. ;)

    • @dhartmahmed50
      @dhartmahmed50 6 лет назад

      He did, it was a autobiography in which his friend features heavily

  • @Thegreatquestion
    @Thegreatquestion 10 лет назад

    This is the first episode I have seen and I am hooked! This video is great stuff and very enjoyable! I will be subscribing and liking this video as well.

  • @annwhatvlog
    @annwhatvlog 10 лет назад

    I really like the whole Literature course, and it inspired me to create my own youtube channel - thank you Crash Course ;)

  • @isaiahtheraccoon8928
    @isaiahtheraccoon8928 7 лет назад +4

    Welllllll Marlowe was in the same business as Shakespeare yes, so you'd think they were competitors, but actually the two of them were quite good friends.

  • @PaulWalker87
    @PaulWalker87 10 лет назад +3

    LION KING = HAMLET
    ** MIND BLOWN **

    • @evezoey
      @evezoey 4 года назад

      ANNOYING

  • @annmariebyrnes7847
    @annmariebyrnes7847 4 года назад

    Thank you, John Green. I'm using your wonderful videos to teach Shakespeare remotely during this dreadful time. I appreciate your insights.

  • @farazehkhan7496
    @farazehkhan7496 8 лет назад

    I loved the way he analyzed ... good job

  • @alexiswelsh5821
    @alexiswelsh5821 7 лет назад +4

    Great Dane, Scooby Doo. LOL.

  • @Painfoot
    @Painfoot 10 лет назад +3

    Can you guys do more *literary* analysis? I think the videos are great for getting excited about the stories, but they don't really stretch much beyond the moral or ethical or philosophical problems of the play. There were maybe six lines quoted in twelve minutes, and little about the language of the play, be it imagery or metaphor or narratological structure or irony. Sure, getting the significance of the story is important, but I wish crash course literature did more about literature, and as a learning supplement, about how to approach the language and the text. Literature is about big questions, and the miracle of human consciousness, but it's also about how those questions are framed, how they are worded, how we encounter them.

    • @xavier.mauricio
      @xavier.mauricio 10 лет назад +1

      They did that a lot in the first season, with the passive voice in The Catcher in the Rye and dashes in Emily Dickinson and whatnot. If you haven't checked that out, it should be right up your alley.
      I miss that stuff too, but they're burning through the works faster now in order to talk about more. If something has to go, they've made a good decision. Also, this video is "Hamlet Part I". Maybe Part II will have more of that?

    • @EmilySidhe
      @EmilySidhe 10 лет назад +1

      There may be more literary analysis in the second video.

    • @Painfoot
      @Painfoot 10 лет назад

      Mauricio Xavier You're right, they did a lot especially in the poetry. I'm just judging from the videos on the Odyssey and Oedipus. I feel like it misses out on a lot of the reading/interpretive experience.

    • @bailaeisen5166
      @bailaeisen5166 10 лет назад

      Painfoot I think that the main reason he even covered the Odyssey and Oedipus was to lend a literary background to the rest of the works we will be covering over this Crash Course series, which is why he refers to Greek tragedy when referencing something in Hamlet. I feel like this, as the first modern-ish work, will be explored more in depth in Part II.

  • @themaypole
    @themaypole 10 лет назад +2

    Studying Hamlet in Sixth Form and then seeing the RSC production starring David Tennant cemented my interest in Shakespeare and also how good writing can be. Hamlet is incredible. Awesome play, rle opened my eyes to how intelligent Shakespeare rle was

  • @lailaalkassabi3933
    @lailaalkassabi3933 5 лет назад

    Thank you thank you thank youuu ,, this literature series has literally changed my liiiife ,,, I’m pregnant and had a mild blue-ish phase and the discussion tragedy for some unknown reason lifted my spirit ... I think it’s because I felt I had a “tragedy of time” having only these 9 months to fully celebrate an era that’s ending (my husband and I being just two ) anywhoooooo thanx a million you have lifted my spirits and changed my perspective towards life . (And obviously a big thank you to Shakespeare)

  • @pmkmw1
    @pmkmw1 10 лет назад +12

    two words....Lion King

  • @Kat22Kit
    @Kat22Kit 10 лет назад +6

    Many Hamlets, but the best Hamlet: The one who looks like David Tennant. (Also the PBS/BBC produced movie/film with him is amazing. Its on Amazon pretty cheap)

  • @TheBipolarTroll
    @TheBipolarTroll 10 лет назад

    I actually watched the entire video. Well done sir. I salute you for making this enjoyable.

  • @erins8027
    @erins8027 10 лет назад +1

    You should do a vid about the authorship question because it is fascinating!