Intro to Hamlet Info on the Play Full

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Intro to Hamlet

Intro to Hamlet

Info on the Play • Full title: The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet, Prince of

Info on the Play • Full title: The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark • Genre: tragedy • Written: between 1600 -1602 • Setting: late medieval period (13001500 s), Denmark • Shakespeare used versions of a floating legend of Prince Hamlet to complete the play.

About the Setting: Denmark • Scandinavian country in northern Europe • Ruling system is

About the Setting: Denmark • Scandinavian country in northern Europe • Ruling system is a constitutional monarchy • Language is Danish (close to Norwegian and Swedish)

Medieval Denmark • Before the time period of the play, Danes were considered Vikings

Medieval Denmark • Before the time period of the play, Danes were considered Vikings (Anglo-Saxons) • During the late medieval period (1300 slate 1500 s), country was ruled by powerful kings and the nobility • Controlled the Baltic Sea • Religion was originally Catholic (presently Lutheran)

Kronborg Castle

Kronborg Castle

Major Characters Prince Hamlet • Son of Old King Hamlet and Gertrude • Visited

Major Characters Prince Hamlet • Son of Old King Hamlet and Gertrude • Visited by fathers ghost who asks him to seek revenge for his murder • Driven by revenge, hatred • Is extremely philosophical and moody • Learns to be disgusted by women • May have had an Oedipal Complex

Old King Hamlet’s Ghost • Visits the castle Elsinore around midnight, seeking Hamlet •

Old King Hamlet’s Ghost • Visits the castle Elsinore around midnight, seeking Hamlet • Wants Hamlet to get revenge for his death

Claudius • • Brother of Old King Hamlet Uncle/stepfather of Hamlet Husband to Gertrude

Claudius • • Brother of Old King Hamlet Uncle/stepfather of Hamlet Husband to Gertrude Killed Old King Hamlet

Gertrude • Wife of Old King Hamlet; now wife of his brother, Claudius •

Gertrude • Wife of Old King Hamlet; now wife of his brother, Claudius • Was seduced into marrying Claudius by lust and gifts • Defined by her need for affection • Extremely dependent on men

Polonius • The Lord Chamberlain (responsible for all court functions) • Forces Ophelia to

Polonius • The Lord Chamberlain (responsible for all court functions) • Forces Ophelia to stay away from Hamlet • Father of Ophelia and Laertes

Ophelia • Daughter of Polonius, sister of Laertes • Is completely dominated by the

Ophelia • Daughter of Polonius, sister of Laertes • Is completely dominated by the men • Goes insane

Laertes • Son of Polonius • Brother of Ophelia, whom he seems to have

Laertes • Son of Polonius • Brother of Ophelia, whom he seems to have an incestuous lust for • Wants to kill Hamlet for what happens to his sister

Horatio • Hamlet’s best friend • First to tell Hamlet about the ghost of

Horatio • Hamlet’s best friend • First to tell Hamlet about the ghost of his father

Themes • Uncertainty The play shows how life is built upon uncertainties Some questions

Themes • Uncertainty The play shows how life is built upon uncertainties Some questions that arise: Can we believe in ghosts; Can we for certain know the details of a crime that has no witnesses; Can we know whether our actions will have the results we want them to have

Themes Reasonable, Effective Action The question that comes up is whether or not actions

Themes Reasonable, Effective Action The question that comes up is whether or not actions can really be reasonable, since emotions are almost always involved. n Revenge Is revenge justified? Is it really ok to kill in revenge? n

Themes • Death Hamlet is obsessed with death after his father dies; he becomes

Themes • Death Hamlet is obsessed with death after his father dies; he becomes driven to kill Claudius; he ponders suicide; the death of several characters in the play

Themes • Incest and Incestuous Desire -Claudius and Gertrude -Hamlet’s fixation on Gertrude’s sex

Themes • Incest and Incestuous Desire -Claudius and Gertrude -Hamlet’s fixation on Gertrude’s sex life and w/ her in general -Laertes fear of Ophelia’s relationship with Hamlet and the loss of her virginity

Themes • Misogyny (“hatred of women”) -Hamlet turns misogynistic after his mother “jumps into

Themes • Misogyny (“hatred of women”) -Hamlet turns misogynistic after his mother “jumps into bed” with Claudius -Hamlet tells Ophelia to become a nun so that she does not become corrupted by sex -Views women as weak and easily persuaded

Symbols • The only physical object used as a symbol is Yorick’s skull •

Symbols • The only physical object used as a symbol is Yorick’s skull • Represents the inevitability of death and decay of the body • Also shows that no matter who we are, we all end up the same: as dust