Skip to main content
Folger Teaching Homepage

The Merchant of Venice

Explore resources related to William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice.

Overview

 

In The Merchant of Venice, the path to marriage is hazardous. To win Portia, Bassanio must pass a test prescribed by her father’s will, choosing correctly among three caskets or chests. If he fails, he may never marry at all.

Bassanio and Portia also face a magnificent villain, the moneylender Shylock. In creating Shylock, Shakespeare seems to have shared in a widespread prejudice against Jews. Shylock would have been regarded as a villain because he was a Jew. Yet he gives such powerful expression to his alienation due to the hatred around him that, in many productions, he emerges as the hero.

Portia is most remembered for her disguise as a lawyer, Balthazar, especially the speech in which she urges Shylock to show mercy that “droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven.”

Most Popular Resources

Cutting a Scene: The Merchant of Venice 3.1

Teaching Resource

Cutting a Scene: The Merchant of Venice 3.1

Get students evaluating Shakespeare's writing all on their own with this low-prep, high-impact way of teaching close reading.
Tags:

Historical Characterization of Shylock from The Merchant of Venice

Teaching Resource

Historical Characterization of Shylock from The Merchant of Venice

Tags:

Paired Texts: Portia from The Merchant of Venice and Nessa from District Merchants

Teaching Resource

Paired Texts: Portia from The Merchant of Venice and Nessa from District Merchants

The power of asides, in plays separated by centuries and united by common questions...
Tags:

Cutting a Scene: The Merchant of Venice 3.1

Teaching Resource

Cutting a Scene: The Merchant of Venice 3.1

Get students evaluating Shakespeare's writing all on their own with this low-prep, high-impact way of teaching close reading.
Tags:

Historical Characterization of Shylock from The Merchant of Venice

Teaching Resource

Historical Characterization of Shylock from The Merchant of Venice

Tags:

Paired Texts: Portia from The Merchant of Venice and Nessa from District Merchants

Teaching Resource

Paired Texts: Portia from The Merchant of Venice and Nessa from District Merchants

The power of asides, in plays separated by centuries and united by common questions...
Tags:

Choral Reading: Shylock’s Revenge Speech in The Merchant of Venice 3.1

Teaching Resource

Choral Reading: Shylock’s Revenge Speech in The Merchant of Venice 3.1

Tags:

Getting All Students Inside Tough Speeches

Teaching Resource

Getting All Students Inside Tough Speeches

How can any student encounter a speech for the first time and make meaning from it on their own, without any teacher explanation?
Tags: