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The Tragedy of Hamlet Prince of Denmark
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A. Background One of the four great tragedies Seneca and the Revenge
Play 3. Renaissance Concepts The great chain of being King as great wheel and as microcosm
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A. Background (continued)
Some definitions: Tragic hero: Tragic flaw: Tragedy: Comedy:
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B. Structure of the Play Five Acts – the 9th grade plot map
2. Three Plot Threads Ghost story all climax in Detective story Act III Revenge story
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C. Setting Denmark / Elsinore-microcosm of world
King = microcosm of Denmark (world) (I,v,42; I,v,74-75; III,iii,12-24) 3. Denmark as prison (II, ii, 260) -->corrupt World as garden of Eden (I,ii, ; I,v,38)
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D. Major Themes Justice vs. Revenge (Eddie Polec story)
2. Illusion vs reality Ghost or devil “seems” Actors (II,ii 555) King or murderer Prostitute / make up imagery (III,I,59; III, I, 152; V, i, )
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D. Major Themes ( continued)
The honest man in the corrupt society 4. Father – Son archetype Ghost Hamlet Past Present
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D. Major Themes ( continued)
Biblical Level—a new Paradise Lost and Regained (Hamlet as “savior’ figure—sent by heavenly [ghostly] father) 6. Death—the final contagion a. to be or not to be b. all fathers must die c. worm food imagery d. gravediggers’ scene and Yorick e. final scene and poisonings f. a play completely about death
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Characters Hamlet—perhaps the most complex in English drama
a. Renaissance man b. Madness? c. Tragic flaw d. Philosophical e. Noble heart
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E. Characters Claudius: 3. Gertrude: 4. Polonius:
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E. Characters Ophelia Laertes: 7. Fortinbras: Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern:
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F. Imagery and Symbolsim
Garden imagery Disease, contagion, poison Harlots and make up Death imagery
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