Welcome back to Intercast, we wish you all the best for 2023, and we are back with a new episode about Othello and in particular, Iago's soliloquy, located at the end of Act 2, Scene 1, in which the characters are now isolated. Here Iago is actually giving his opinion on this exchange and telling his plans for future actions to the audience, creating dramatic irony. This passage first shows the will for revenge from Iago as well as his wicked manipulation, then it also helps to depict women’s importance in the play, seen as prized possessions and finally presents the ambiguity of the two-faced character’s thoughts.
With the voices of : Athina, Maria, Azilis, Rose, Mathilde, Rose, Olympe and Sacha.
First episode of Intercast's new season, and we decided to list a few quotes from Wilkie Collins' "The Moonstone"!
Welcome back to Intercast! Today’s episode will be concerning Leonard Quirino’s essay about Games and Cards in A Streetcar Named Desire. You can check out the essay at https://padlet-uploads.storage.googleapis.com/43551018/c1cadec26eb65b315c7dfd6b2553e250/Critical_articles_on_ASND.pdf. First approaching tha theatrical use of games in A Streetcar Named Desire, we will then show how the play is a game aas a whole to make a complete analysis and summary of Quirino’s essay.
Welcome back to Intercast ! This week's episode will be based on the several classes we have had about Shakespeare's Othello and the context surrounding it. From the Elizabethan era to the analysis of Blackness in Othello, we have attempted to apporoach every aspect possible!
In this episode, we will analyse and make a synthese of Alice Griffin's essay on the theme of light and water in Tennessee Williams' play A Streetcar Named Desire. We have attempted to add elements that were not talked about in the critical essay but that also had their importance when approaching those themes. There is probably more to say but we have tried to combine all the major elements to provide a better understanding of dialogues and stage directions in the play. You can read the critical essay that is being talked about at https://padlet-uploads.storage.googleapis.com/43551018/c1cadec26eb65b315c7dfd6b2553e250/Critical_articles_on_ASND.pdf
In this episode, we will analyse and make a synthese of Mary Ann Corrigan's essay on the theme of illusions and reality in Tennessee Williams' play A Streetcar Named Desire. This will be talked about in four parts, starting with Blanche's ambiguity, following with how Stanley is part of illusions and reality, then how the two characters’ relationship can be a representation of the topic, and finally the effect the theme has on the audience. You can read the critical essay that is being talked about at https://padlet-uploads.storage.googleapis.com/43551018/c1cadec26eb65b315c7dfd6b2553e250/Critical_articles_on_ASND.pdf
Here is a trailer to Intercast, a podcast made specifically for the members of Grand Air's international section that will help you study and provide you analyses of what has been viewed in class!