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HAMLET%20Critics%20and%20key%20vocab

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Revengers create their own civil justice, ... Evans (The Revenger s Tragedy) Vindice does not seem despaired by his death, his final words are not tragic. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HAMLET%20Critics%20and%20key%20vocab


1
HAMLET Critics and key vocab
  • http//people.brandeis.edu/teuber/earlycrit.html

2
Swinburne
  • The single characteristic of Hamlets innermost
    nature is by no means irresolution or hesitation
    or any form of weakness, but rather the strong
    conflux of contending forces
  • Paraphrased A characteristic of Hamlets
    innermost nature is not irresolution or
    hesitation, but a desire to prove an argument
    right and the struggle to overcome dangers.

3
Samuel Johnson
  • Hamlet is, through the whole play, rather an
    instrument than an agent.
  • he makes no attempt to punish Claudius, and his
    death is at last effected by an incident which
    Hamlet has no part in producing

4
Von Goethe
  • Impossibilities have been required of Hamlet not
    in themselves impossibilities, but such for him.
  • All duties seem Holy for Hamlet

5
Bradley
  • Hamlet is unable to carry out the sacred duty,
    imposed by divine authority, of punishing an evil
    man by death

6
Coleridge
  • Paraphrase Shakespeare seems to have wished to
    exemplify the moral necessity of balance between
    our senses and our minds. In Hamlet, this balance
    seems disturbed his thoughts and imagination are
    far more vivid than his actual perceptions.
  • Hamlet is obliged to act on the spur of the
    moment

7
Wilson Knight
  • Claudius, as he appears in the play, is not a
    criminal.  He  isstrange  as  it  may  seema
     good  and  gentle  king, enmeshed by the chain
    of causality linking him with his crime. And this
    chain he might, perhaps, have broken except for
    Hamlet, and all would have been well. 
  •  Hamlet is an element of evil in the state of
    Denmark

8
Wilson Knight
  • Claudius can hardly be blamed for his later
    actions. They are forced on him. As King, he
    could scarcely be expected to do otherwise.
    Hamlet is a danger to the state, even apart from
     his  knowledge  of  Claudius  guilt.  He  is  
    inhuman () he is feared by those around him.
    They are always trying in vain to  ?nd out what
    is wrong with him. They cannot understand him. He
    is a creature of another world. As King of
    Denmark he would have been a thousand times more
    dangerous than Claudius.

9
Wilson Knight
  • Hamlet is a figure of nihilism (The rejection of
    all religious and moral principles, often in the
    belief that life is meaningless) and death.
  • He is in fact the poison in the veins of the
    community.
  • The question of relative morality of Hamlet and
    Claudius reflects the ultimate problem of the
    play

10
Alexander
  • The play does not offer any conclusions about
    what is the right repsonse to the questions it
    poses about human aggression, not because it is
    confused but because Hamlet is aware that more
    than one single set of answers exists.
  • The proof of the Kings guilt does not solve
    Hamlets problem. The question remains, how does
    one deal with such a man, without becoming like
    him?

11
Belsey
  • Revenge is not justice. It is rather an act of
    injustice on behalf of justice
  • Revenge is always in excess of justice
  • Claudius is still in possession of the crown and
    Gertrude and is planning the death of Hamlet ()
    in these circumstances revenge is a political as
    well as a moral issue
  • Revenge exists on a margin between justice and
    crime

12
Alexander
  • The desire for vengeance is seen as part of a
    continuing pattern of human conduct.
  • The audience are entertained because they are
    being asked to see, feel and understand a little
    more about the hidden springs of action which are
    supposed to drive the characters.

13
Alexander
  • The feeling of failure and frustration, which
    Hamlet himself recognizes, is created by this
    rapid alternation between the language of blood
    revenge and the language of conscience.
  • The other characters in the play do not hesitate
    to act because they are sure of their own values
    and beliefs. Fortinbras and Laertes act because
    they believe that certain actions are right or
    honourable.

14
Marilyn French
  • Rosencrantz and Guildenstern sacrifice the bond
    of human friendship to a social propriety

15
Rebecca Smith
  • Although he clearly loves her- Claudius shares
    the Hamlets conception of Gertrude as an object.
    She is possessed as one of the effects of his
    actions.
  • Gertrude uses her dying words to warn Hamlet of
    the poison, but doesnt accuse Claudius.
  • Gertrude has not moved in the play toward
    independence only her divided loyalties and her
    unhappiness intensify.

16
Rebecca Smith
  • Polonius seems to love his children he seems to
    have the welfare of the kingdom in mind. His
    means of action, however, are totally corrupt.
  • Female virtue is identical with chastity thus
    Polonius () trained his daughter to be obedient
    and chaste and is able to use her a a piece of
    bait for spying.

17
Showalter
  • Ophelia is deprived of thought, sexuality and
    language.
  • She represents the strong emotions that the
    Elizabethans as well as the Freudians thought
    womanish and unmanly.
  • Hamlets disguist at the feminine passivity in
    himself is translated into violent revulsion
    against women and into his brutal behaviour
    towards Ophelia

18
Brucher
  • Revengers create their own civil justice, often
    in ways that imitate or even mock divine justice
    and that compromise their own moral impulses.
  • The problem is that while a diabolically
    ingenious killing may offend our moral
    responsibilities, it may also appeal to our
    fantasies about power, control and poetic justice
    in a corrupt world

19
Unknown
  • There is the simple, inescapable fact that the
    attempt to rid Denmark of its villain-king has
    left the country in a worse state than it was at
    the outset.
  • Guildenstern and Rosencrantz are a pair of
    faceless automatons (imitating human beings) and
    serve as an element of comedy in the tragedy.
    When the King thanks Rosencrantz and gentle
    Guildenstern the Queen thanks Guildenstern and
    gentle Rosencrantz. They are so alike that they
    are almost indistinguishable.

20
Evans (The Revengers Tragedy)
  • Lust becomes a metaphor for wider social
    sicknesses
  • Misogyny of Lussurioso and Junior Brother as well
    as their cynicism towards women reflect their own
    corruption. Vindices cynicism is born out of a
    disappointed idealism.
  • Despite his misogyny, Vindice still believes that
    his mother and sister are somewhat different and
    atypical from the rest. The audience are not
    likely to share Lussuriosos cynicism because to
    a large extent, the audience shares Vindices
    idealism about Castiza and Gratiana.

21
Evans (The Revengers Tragedy)
  • The scene where Vindice tests his mother and
    sister and the plays focus on women functions
    with dramaturgical as well as thematic
    effectiveness, in this case helping to create an
    effect of real suspense.
  • Vindice tempts his mother and sister not out of
    misogyny, but precisely to protect them from
    viciousness. If they fall, he will be there to
    catch them.

22
Evans (The Revengers Tragedy)
  • Gratianas salvation means more than the
    redemption of Vindices mother. Gratianas
    transformation symbolizes the possibility of at
    least individual regeneration in the dark world
    presented by the play.
  • The opportunity for Gratiana to test her newly
    recovered virtue arrives too conveniently and so
    neither Gratiana nor the audience is likely to
    believe that Castiza has changed so abruptly and
    drastically.
  • However, this shows that Castiza is not entirely
    incapable of corruption.

23
Evans (The Revengers Tragedy)
  • Vindice does not seem despaired by his death, his
    final words are not tragic. They have undertones
    of light-hearted vigour. This may seem
    surprising, but after all he has achieved his
    revenge in a manner as cruel as he could have
    imagined. If his mother stayed a bawd and sister
    had become corrupt, his death would have been
    utterly different-utterly darker than it is.

24
Key vocabulary to use
  • Social disorder is reflected in the play
  • Seneca is the creator of the genre
  • Antithesis is the opposite of something
  • Ubiquitous refers to an idea or a feeling which
    is present everywhere, e.g. corruption
  • Jacobean establishes when the play was set
  • Patriarchal refers to a male dominated society

25
Key vocabulary to use
  • Soliloquy/soliloquies refer to Hamlets
    monologues which are directed at the audience
  • Middleton uses asides for a similar effect
  • Retribution means the same as revenge
  • Malcontent refers to a person disillusioned with
    the society
  • Hubris describes excessive pride and over
    confidence

26
Key vocabulary to use
  • Hamartia is another term for fatal flaw
  • Anagnorisis refers to the moment in the play when
    a character makes a critical discovery
  • Stichomythia is when dialogue is used as
    alternating lines (as seen in the closet scene)
  • Plethora refers to an excess of something
  • Inexorable describes something which is
    impossible to stop.
  • Circumlocutious is a word for unnecessarily wordy
    speech
  • Louche can be used to describe something or
    someone of of questionable taste or morality
  • Quixotic refers to something exceedingly
    idealistic
  • Convoluted means extremely complex
  • To ruminate is to think of something deeply
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