well, make it interactive, and make it revolved around poetry :)
What Renaissance ideas did Shakespeare's work address?
Shakespeare was not known for his ideas. He was known for his plays, which were indeed immediately popular.
Shakespeare got the ideas for virtually all of his stories from books he had read. Very few of his plots are original. The Comedy of Errors is based on an old Latin play, for example.
somewhere
It is said that Shakespeare used the writings of Plutarch for ideas for his ancient history plays.
Shakespeare lived a happy life with his three children Susanna Judith and Hamnet but when Hamnet died it gave William new ideas for new plays where they have a tragedy also William had a granddaughter called Elizabeth who was the daughter of Susanna
What Renaissance ideas did Shakespeare's work address?
Will drastically changed the English language. He also added new ideas, and gave us an inside look at the time period he lived in which is otherwise porrly recorded.
Shakespeare was not known for his ideas. He was known for his plays, which were indeed immediately popular.
Shakespeare got the ideas for virtually all of his stories from books he had read. Very few of his plots are original. The Comedy of Errors is based on an old Latin play, for example.
somewhere
The saying "Beware the ides of March came from William Shakespeare's famous play, "Julius Caesar."
He got most of his ideas from books he had read.
Shakespearean sonnet themes explore the ideas of love, aging, beauty, time, lust, practical obligations, and feelings of incompetence. These themes emerge from Shakespeare's descriptions of the relationships between his characters.
From the things and people around him.
You can get ideas by things around you... Take nature for example..
He didn't, really. Some highly pretentious authors, like Harold Bloom, have claimed that he did, but what Bloom is claiming is that Shakespeare invented Victorian literary criticism, which is not only ridiculous but impossible. With Shakespeare, people take their own ideas to the plays and find them reflected there and articulated better than they could articulate them themselves. Shakespeare, in his own words, "holds the mirror up to nature" but he does not create nature. He did not create Harold Bloom's Victorian outlook on literature, but when Bloom looks at Shakespeare, he finds his outlook reflected back to him, and imagines that Shakespeare must have invented it.