Sunday, February 10, 2019
Indecision, Hesitation and Delay in Shakespeares Hamlet Essay
Admonished by the ghost of his poisoned father, troubled by the stench of a kingdom in decline, outraged by his puff mothers incestuous liaison, why did Hamlet wait so long to deport decisively? Theories abound. Hamlet had an Oedipus complex. Hamlet was mad rather than merely make-believe to be. Hamlet was an intellectual pansy. Hamlet was an existentialist. Etc. T. S. Eliot went so far as to say that the play itself was flawed, Hamlets worry actually the authors own, insoluble. I believe that the Problem is actually ours. Perhaps the real issue is not Hamlets hesitation, but our involuntariness to understand it. In an ironic maneuver, Shakespeare has Hamlet tell us about(predicate) the self-destructive power of a tragic flaw So, oft it chances in particular men,That for some vicious mole of nature in them, As, in their birth--wherein they are not guilty, Since nature cannot choose his origin--By the oergrowth of some complexion, a great deal breaking down the pales and fort s of reason, Or by some habit that excessively much oer-leavens The form of plausive manners, that these men, Carrying, I say, the stamp of one defect, cosmos natures livery, or fortunes star,-- Their virtues else--be they as pure as grace, As infinite as man may undergo--Shall in the general censure take degeneracy From that particular fault the dram of eale Doth all the noble substance of a doubt To his own scandal. Believers that virtuousness (or enlightenment) guarantees right conduct, take noteThe recognize to Hamlets flaw, the stuckness that has puzzled so many readers, is lodged, not in the beginning, but in the end--the place of maximum emphasis--of the to be or not to be soliloquy, the closely famous dramatic monologue... ...udies of Imagination. Oxford Oxford University Press. Brown, Keith. 1973. Form and Cause Conjoind Hamlet and Shakespeares Workshop. Shakespeare Survey 2611-20. Fineman, Joel. 1980. Fratricide and Cuckoldry Shakespeares Doubles. In Representing Shakespeare stark naked Psychoanalytic Essays, edited by Coppelia Kahn and Murray M. Schwarz. Baltimore and capital of the United Kingdom The Johns Hopkins Press, 70-109. Fleissner, Robert. 1982. Sullied Or hale Hamlets Flesh Once More. Hamlet Studies 492-3. Fowler, Alastair. 1987. The Plays Within the Play of Hamlet. In Fanned and Winnowed Opinions Shakespearean Essays Presented to Harold Jenkins, edited by John W. Mahon and Thomas A. Pendleton. London and New York Methuen. Freud, Sigmund. 1953-74. The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works. 24 vols, trans. James Stachey. London Hogarth.
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