Pug wrote:
Me: I have an English degree, including 3 hours of study in Shakespeare, and a point - Shakespeare isn't as great as you think he is. There's many items he was great at - but what he was first at was the presentation/theatre style - nothing to do with his writing...
You: pretty much insulting for no reason.
At no point did I say Shakespeare sux.
A degree with 3 hours study of Shakespeare?
Deez I went off on the long one because someone tried to use an (ill-informed) point about Shakespeare in an argument against me, for some unknown reason. Also, I haven't said anything about 'education'; I'm arguing the merits of the writer based on his writing, nothing to do with the self...
The whole point of the digression is that certain 'new school' posters have a writing style that alienates others, comparing it to 'vernacular' (lolz) Shakespeare... well, what a load of bullshit. All of the D&ST participants are clearly well-educated people that can read and comprehend English prose, so stop holding the writing style of certain people against their debating credibility. As I said in the first place, intellect is a major force in intelligent debate- which for some reason turned into a semantics argument about wit, intelligence and profundity. I still maintain my original point, which is that you complaining 'old school' members can GTFO because the new guys have a lot of insightful and intelligent things to say, whether it suits your notions of 'D&ST' or not.
And please don't call the 'U r a troll' card on me when you mentioned with apparent pride that you were quite the 'tough one' in your OP. I'm just trying to live up to and emulate your high-standards, oh wise and incredible old one
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Oh and as an aside to Pug:
Pug wrote:
but what he was first at was the presentation/theatre style
What?!? Shakespeare was 'first' at his theatrical style? Aka giving no stage direction or theatrical intervention at all? Come on, Shakespeare was a writer, a poet and a playwright first and foremost- his skill with the quill clearly stood above his 'skill' at play production. He crafted works that suited his audience and Court, but I think the point is that his role was in
writing them, he left all of the production and dramatic elements to his company and actors themselves... I find it ludicrous that you make such a statement after 3 hours (years?) of Shakespeare study. What about his folio of Sonnets and poems that so masterfully revived Dante-Chaucer's iambic pentameter? You cannot ignore those... answer in PM, I'm interested
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Last edited by Uzique (2008-12-10 08:27:58)