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William Shakespeare

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Title: William Shakespeare


1
William Shakespeare
34
  • Hamlet, Prince of Denmark

2
Shakespeares England
  • At the time of Shakespeare, England was a small
    nation by modern standards, with a population of
    about five million.
  • The English Renaissance was in full bloom. The
    arts and sciences flourished, and increased
    contact with other nations led to new styles of
    living, new fashions, new art forms (the sonnet),
    and a broader vocabulary (which Shakespeare
    eagerly appropriated).
  • England was mostly rural. Agriculture was the
    chief means of livelihood. Mining and timber
    were expanding industries.

A Marriage Feast at Bermondsey by Joris Hoefnagel
(ca. 1569)
3
Shakespeares England continued
  • New domestic comforts included chimneys, metal
    dishes, carpets, windows, beds, and pillows.
  • Travel within England was slow because of poor
    roads and dangerous because of highway robbers.
  • The heart of London stretched for a couple of
    miles at most.
  • The city had trees, gardens, and meadows. London
    Bridge was a fashionable thoroughfare with shops
    festively decorated for certain occasions. But
    London Bridge also displayed the heads of
    executed traitors.
  • City houses were small and crowded, and the
    streets narrow and filthy.

4
Shakespeares England continued
  • Epidemics and plagues resulted from the
    unsanitary conditions.
  • England was a proud nation that had begun to
    forge a strong national identity.
  • The English took pride in their nations overseas
    exploration and empire expansion. Sir Francis
    Drake circumnavigated the world from 1577-1581,
    and the English founded its first permanent
    colony in America with Jamestown in 1607.
  • Ireland was declared a kingdom under English rule
    in 1541, but was more a source of trouble than of
    economic strength.

5
Queen Elizabeth
  • Elizabethan England takes its name from Queen
    Elizabeth, who lived from 1533-1603, reigning
    from 1558-1603. She was the daughter of King
    Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, who was executed
    three years after Elizabeths birth.
  • Elizabeths reign was generally marked by peace,
    economic prosperity, and social advancement.
  • Despite her success, the age was openly skeptical
    about a womans ability and right to rule.
  • The Babington Conspiracy of 1586 refers to a plot
    to assassinate Elizabeth. Mary, Queen of Scots,
    was involved and executed when the plot was
    uncovered.

The Darnley Portrait of Queen Elizabeth 1 (ca.
1575)
6
Queen Elizabeth continued
  • Elizabeth was a skilled diplomat who dealt
    effectively with foreign governments, factions at
    home, and Parliament.
  • Elizabeth never married. Marriage would have
    upset the delicate political relationships she
    maintained with one foreign or domestic group or
    another.
  • She was a patron of the arts and several poems
    have been credited to her.
  • Elizabeth was succeeded by James I (reigned until
    1625). A far less successful monarch, he was not
    a good diplomat as he resisted compromise. He
    was out of touch with the English people, and his
    reign helped widen the gap between crown and
    Parliament that led to the Civil War.

7
The Globe Theatre
  • The theatre was so important and influential to
    the Elizabethans that Queen Elizabeth found it
    necessary to censor plays. Shakespeare avoided
    the controversial political issues of the day.
  • The Globe Theatre opened on the south bank of the
    Thames River in 1599. Shakespeare was a minor
    shareholder in the theatre and many of his
    greatest plays premiered at the Globe.
  • The Globe could accommodate an audience of
    perhaps 3,000, including 800 groundlings, who
    paid a penny to stand on the ground surrounding
    the stage.
  • More prosperous spectators sat in one of the
    three stories nearly encircling the stage.

8
Globe Theatre continued
  • The stage projected out into the audience,
    creating more intimacy between actors and
    audience than on Greek stages. Like the Greek
    amphitheaters, the stage was open to the sky.
  • The Globe had a fairly versatile stage,
    containing a balcony, several doors for
    convenient entrances and exits, a curtained
    alcove, and a stage floor trapdoor. Costumes
    were often elaborate.
  • All parts were played by men or young boys.
    Women were not allowed to appear on stage until
    after the English Restoration in 1660.
  • In 1613, during a performance of Henry VIII,
    sparks from a stage cannon set the thatched roof
    on fire. The theatre burned to the ground in
    less than two hours. There were no deaths. The
    theatre was quickly rebuilt with a tiled roof.
    The theatre functioned successfully until 1642
    when the Puritans rose to power and closed all
    theatres. The Globe was demolished to make room
    for tenements in 1644.

9
William Shakespeare
  • William Shakespeare was born in April 1564 in
    Stratford-upon-Avon. His father was a successful
    merchant and fairly prominent member of the
    community who later fell on hard times.
  • The young Shakespeare attended local schools,
    where he learned some Latin and a little Greek.
  • In late 1582, Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway,
    who was eight years older than he. They had three
    children together.
  • Shakespeare spent most of his working life, some
    twenty-five years, in London, as one of a troupe
    of players called Lord Chamberlains Men. He was
    an actor and the companys principal playwright.
  • Apparently a political conservative, he seemed to
    enjoy London, but never surrendered his roots in
    the countryside. In 1597, Shakespeare purchased
    New Place, a fine house in Stratford-upon-Avon
    a sign that he had prospered in his career.

10
Shakespeares Life continued
  • By most counts, Shakespeare wrote some 37 plays
    between 1591 and 1611.
  • His poetry includes long narrative poems, such as
    Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece, and
    154 sonnets.
  • Shakespeare retired to New Place in 1611 and died
    on April 23, 1616.
  • Contemporaries, like Ben Jonson wrote about him
    with extravagant praise and contemporary critic
    Harold Bloom calls Shakespeare the supreme
    genius (Genius A Mosaic of One Hundred
    Exemplary Creative Minds 11).

Hes the rain forest of our language in fact
the first user of thousands of words and he is
one of the great creators of beauty. You cant
solve the pain of life. But you can set beauty
against it and maybe endure it. Ralph
Williams, University of Michigan
11
Ben Jonson on Shakespeare
  • Soul of the age!The applause! delight! the
    wonder of our stage!My SHAKESPEARE rise! I will
    not lodge thee byChaucer, or Spenser, or bid
    Beaumont lieA little further, to make thee a
    roomThou art a monument without a tomb,And art
    alive still while thy book doth liveAnd we have
    wits to read, and praise to give.
  • But stay, I see thee in the hemisphereAdvanced,
    and made a constellation there!Shine forth, thou
    Star of Poets, and with rageOr influence, chide
    or cheer the drooping stage,Which, since thy
    flight from hence, hath mourned like night,And
    despairs day, but for thy volume's light.
  • from To the Memory of My Beloved Master
    William Shakespeare

12
Harold Bloom on Shakespeare
  • Shakespeare is the supreme genius who at the
    least changed our ways of presenting human
    nature, if not human nature itself.
    Shakespeares language is primary to his art he
    employed more than twenty-one thousand separate
    words. He invented about eighteen hundred
    coinages, many of them now in common use. The
    great French dramatist Racine used two thousand
    words, not many more than Shakespeare coined.
    The true Shakespearean difference, the uniqueness
    of his genius, is elsewhere, in his universality,
    in the persuasive illusion (is it illusion?) that
    he has peopled a world, remarkably like what we
    take to be our own, with men, women, and children
    preternaturally natural. Is there another
    dramatist who excelled equally at comedy and
    tragedy? We have no comedies by Sophocles, or
    tragedies by Aristophanes.

13
Shakespeares Endurance
  • In short, Shakespeare endures because of his
    masterful use of words, his insight into the
    human mind and human action, and his ability to
    explore and reveal the complexities and paradoxes
    inherent in the human condition.
  • Shakespeares greatest tragedies are generally
    considered to be King Lear, Macbeth, Othello, and
    Hamlet (written c. 1600 and for which Shakespeare
    used several sources).

14
Hamlet
  • Hamlet, the most famous play in English
    literature, continues to fascinate and challenge
    both readers and audiences.
  • In Hamlet, Shakespeare has given us perhaps his
    richest and most complex tragic hero. Actors
    have long craved to play Hamlet to prove their
    depth, resourcefulness, and skill.
  • Famous actors who have played Hamlet onstage or
    onscreen include John Gielgud, Laurence Olivier,
    Richard Burton, Nicol Williamson, Ben Kingsley,
    Maximilian Schell, Sarah Bernhardt, Mel Gibson,
    Kenneth Branagh, Sam Waterston, Ethan Hawke, and
    Jude Law.

Laurence Olivier as Hamlet in film (1948)
15
  • Of all of Shakespeares plays, Hamlet probably
    holds the most interest for an actor. Because
    one of the things its about is acting and
    pretending to be what youre not. Its a play
    that very much inhabits the world of the
    imagination the world of what if, the world of
    finding out who you are, what you are, where you
    are in relation to other people and to the
    universe.

- Derek Jacobi, actor and director
16
Hamlet continued
  • At plays beginning, Hamlet is an untested
    college student and a prince who returns home for
    his fathers funeral and his mothers remarriage.
  • Through the course of the play, his movement to
    the heroic is not swift nor is it always smooth
    and direct. He is far more reflective and
    hesitant than Oedipus and Othello, who are both
    more action-oriented.
  • But Hamlet is younger and far less experienced
    than either Oedipus or Othello when their plays
    open. By the plays conclusion, however, Hamlet
    proves himself as not just a mature man but as a
    hero as he challenges King Claudius and risks his
    life for the sake of Denmark and a rightful King.

17
Hamlet continued
  • As a maturing and unproven young man, Hamlet must
    deal with grief, an unaware mother, a ghost, a
    corrupt court, manipulated but well-intentioned
    friends, love, sycophantic courtiers, despair,
    and emotional pain.
  • As a result, Hamlet can be introspective,
    melancholy, sensitive, cruel, courageous,
    indecisive, impetuous, intelligent, deliberate,
    cynical, witty, suicidal, playful, warm, vain,
    self-indulgent, and gracious. Yet he is always a
    convincing character.
  • Hamlet is as full-blooded a character as ever
    created. He is very much a young, confused man
    in search of himself and the truth.

18
Hamlets Delay
  • Why does Hamlet take so long to avenge his
    fathers murder?
  • Hamlet has several reasons for his delay
  • He is not sure that the ghost is his fathers
    (2.2).
  • He needs confirmation of Claudiuss guilt (The
    Mousetrap, 2.2).
  • He does not kill Claudius at prayer as his soul
    will ascend to heaven (3.3).
  • Hamlets depression over his fathers death and
    mothers quick remarriage has immobilized him, as
    depression will often do.
  • His own nature, which tends to be cautious and
    non-violent.
  • How plausible is each of these reasons?
  • The 1948 film version, starring Laurence Olivier
    as Hamlet, begins with the following statement
    This is the story of a man who could not make up
    his mind. Is this statement fair to Hamlet?

19
Hamlet and Insanity
  • The question of Hamlets sanity has long been
    debated. Does he just pretend to be insane? Do
    the pretense and the pressure truly drive him
    temporarily insane?
  • Consider the following scenes Ophelias report
    of Hamlets behavior to her father (2.1.78-102)
    Hamlets conversation with Polonius
    (2.2.172-218) his interaction with Ophelia (3.1,
    3.2) his behavior immediately after The
    Mousetrap (3.2) his seeing a ghost that the
    Queen doesnt see (3.4) his treatment of
    Rosencrantz and Guildenstern his actions in the
    graveyard with Laertes (5.2).
  • He does warn us that he will feign madness (1.5.
    179-89 3.2.89), and he is never insane with
    Horatio or in his soliloquies.
  • Does he pretend madness as a protective device,
    one that would give him license to speak boldly?
    Remember, he is very interested in acting and the
    stage see his discussion with the players (2.2).

20
Hamlets Development
  • Hamlets self-development can be charted through
    his soliloquies and speeches.
  • Hamlets first soliloquy (O, that this too
    sullied , 1.2.129) is marked by passion,
    specifically melancholy, anger, and disgust, as
    his emotions spill out uncontrolled with an
    excessiveness that is self-indulgent and
    self-pitying, displaying a kind of teenage angst.
  • In the theatres most famous soliloquy, To be or
    not to be (3.1.57), Hamlet is philosophical, but
    broodingly self-centered and indecisive.

21
Hamlets Development continued
  • By Act 4, Hamlet is more outward looking, still
    philosophical but committed to action, action
    requiring great courage and resolute see his
    soliloquy, How all occasions do inform against
    me, 4.4.33. To see Hamlets development,
    juxtapose the first line of the soliloquy, To be
    or not to be that is the question, with the
    last line of the soliloquy in 4.4, which ends,
    My thoughts be bloody or be nothing worth!
  • In Act 5, Hamlets speeches can still be quite
    emotional as when he leaps into Ophelias grave
    and proclaims his love (5.1), but throughout Act
    5 Hamlet is more in control of his emotions he
    is more philosophical, more concerned with
    Denmark and others than himself and his personal
    concerns which dominate his first soliloquy
    (1.2.129). In fact, as he dies he announces his
    support for Fortinbras to assume the throne
    (5.2.355). These final words reveal a selfless
    prince more concerned with state than self.

22
Hamlet as Tragic Hero
  • 1. The traditional tragic hero must be
    extraordinary in rank and deed of high
    estate, great reputation and prosperity.
  • Hamlet is a prince who rises to the level of
    tragic hero as he challenges the corrupt King
    Claudius and risks his life for the sake of
    Denmark and a rightful king. Certainly, he is
    different from Oedipus and Othello who have
    accomplished much by the beginnings of their
    plays.
  • 2. A Tragic Flaw Hamartia
  • A tragic flaw is the personality trait or fated
    mistake that leads to a tragic heros downfall.
    Does Hamlet have a glaring tragic flaw, or is it
    his whole character that causes him to rise and
    then fall?
  • 3. Outside elements cooperate in the heros
    fall.
  • There are several elements that contribute to
    his downfall. First and foremost, is Claudius.
    Others, however, play a role Gertrude, Ophelia,
    Laertes, and just about all characters with the
    exception of Horatio and Fortinbras.

23
The Tragic Hero continued
  • 4. Recognition Anagnorisis
  • Hamlet experiences recognition or anagnorisis,
    as he not only learns the specific truth about
    his fathers death, Claudiuss corruption, and
    Denmarks corruption, but he also learns about
    himself and the complex nature of the world
    itself.
  • Willingness to Suffer
  • Hamlet is willing to die for Denmark, and
    accepts death graciously as he forgives Laertes,
    praises Fortinbras, and asks Horatio to tell his
    story.

24
Hamlet as Traditional Tragedy
  • Restoration Traditional tragedy follows a
    pattern of upheaval and restoration. As the play
    opens, Something is rotten in the state of
    Denmark (1.4.90). The court, led by a corrupt
    King and a clueless Queen, is comprised of
    sycophants. By the end of the play, Hamlet has
    lost his life but has rid the court of its
    corruption and installed an honest king on the
    throne.
  • Poetry The traditional language of tragedy is
    poetry, which establishes an exalted atmosphere
    and expresses the heights and depths of human
    emotion and action more completely. See, for
    example, one of Hamlets soliloquy.
  • Catharsis The emotional renewal created by an
    audiences feelings of pity and terror for a
    tragic hero, resulting in the recognition that
    the heros tragic fate was just and that his
    acceptance of that fate makes the tragedy
    complete.

25
Setting
  • The action takes place in the King and Queens
    palace, the seat of power and the center of
    corruption, a visual illustrating that something
    is rotten in the state of Denmark (1.4.90) and
    that the future of the state is in jeopardy.
  • The play is set in multiple rooms of the palace,
    many of which are small spaces and private
    enclosures, where the characters hope their moral
    corruption and duplicity can be hidden and kept
    private a very different setting from the
    palace steps of Oedipus the King.
  • The plays first scene is set on a platform
    before the castle. Here is where the ghost will
    be received. The implication is that moral
    leadership must come from without. This
    foreshadows what happens at the conclusion of the
    tragedy when Fortinbras, a Norwegian, enters the
    castle to begin Denmarks regeneration.

26
King Claudius
  • Claudius wastes his talents in his selfish desire
    for power. He is a murderer, manipulator, and
    coward. Seemingly incapable of love, he watches
    his wife drink poison rather than reveal himself.
    Although he tells Laertes that Hamlet is a
    murderer, he will not imprison the Prince, he
    says, because of his love for the Queen and the
    love of the common people for the Prince.
  • Claudius does feel guilt, as evident by his
    action
  • during The Mousetrap, his prayer, and
    thoughts
  • O, my offense is rank, it smells to
    heaven/ It
  • hath the primal eldest curse upont
    (3.3.37-72).
  • Does Claudiuss expression of guilt
    encourage
  • your sympathy?
  • While Claudiuss villainy and malice are
    clear,
  • he cannot rival conscienceless Iago
    (Othello) for
  • absolute evilness.

27
Laertes and Fortinbras
  • Both Laertes and Fortinbras serve as foils to
    Hamlet (a foil is a minor character who, through
    contrast, underscores distinctive characteristics
    of the protagonist).
  • When Laertes councils Ophelia about her
    involvement with Hamlet, he seems justifiably
    cautious and even wise. But when he hears of his
    fathers death, he seeks revenge. He becomes a
    man of action, but one who is imprudent, who is
    too easily influenced by Claudius. Hamlet
    contrasts with Laertes by being far more prudent
    and slow in his revenge-seeking.
  • Similarly, Fortinbras is another man of action
    out to revenge his fathers death and loss of
    land. Although his speeches are confident and
    noble, we can question whether his actions are
    too swift. He risks lives for a little patch of
    ground/ That hath in it no profit but the name
    (4.4.19-20). Still, at the end of the play,
    Fortinbras becomes a symbol of regeneration and
    order, meant to inform the audience that
    Denmarks restoration is underway.

28
Polonius
  • Polonius is a political creature unconcerned
    with
  • truth, morality, or love. Above all else,
    he is
  • concerned with preserving his place at
    court. To
  • that end, he will flatter, eavesdrop, and
    lie, and
  • hopefully see his daughter marry Hamlet.
  • Polonius knows his position in the palace
    relies on
  • being useful and agreeable. He avoids
  • contradicting Hamlet on even the most
    insignificant
  • of topics (3.2.373-85).
  • A very practical man, Polonius delivers very
    sensible and often quoted advice to his son
    Laertes (1.3.58-81, which includes to thine own
    self be true). Consider how and from whom these
    lines should be delivered. Are they from a man
    who believes he is passing on valuable
    information, a wealth of wisdom acquired over a
    lifetime? Are they delivered by a cowardly,
    pathetic creature always motivated by
    self-preservation? A shrewd and selfish
    politician? A small-minded courtier, comic in
    his large opinion of himself? Or by a loving
    father concerned about his son?

29
Horatio
Horatio serves several functions - Horatio,
whom Hamlet admires, is a confidant of Hamlet,
providing Shakespeare a way to reveal Hamlets
thoughts and plans in dialogue. Hamlet, for
instance, tells Horatio about his intention with
the play (3.2).
  • - He helps bring out the plays exposition. He
    hears of the Kings carousing and asks, Is it a
    custom? (1.4.13). Hamlets response helps
    reveal Claudiuss ignoble nature. In addition,
    he explains the cause of Denmarks military
    preparations (1.1.83-129).
  • - He is a truly virtuous character, whose
    genuine love for Hamlet contributes in raising
    the audiences esteem for the Prince. Claudius
    no doubt recognizes Horatios intelligence and
    integrity and, although Horatio would serve his
    plotting, the King does not attempt to involve
    him.
  • - Horatio will serve Hamlet, Fortinbras, and the
    kingdom by providing a history of recent events
    which will report all that has unfolded and thus
    help Fortinbras restore a kingdom to decency,
    avoid civil unrest, and establish Hamlet as a
    paragon of absolute integrity and noble heart
    (5.2.361 see 374-97).

30
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
  • Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are victims of the
    courts corruption. At Claudiuss request, they
    have traveled to Denmark to help their friend
    Hamlet break his melancholy mood. They try to
    take Hamlet to England where they will present
    him and a letter to the King, who will follow
    Claudiuss request to execute Hamlet.
    Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, of course, do not
    know the contents of the letter.
  • Rosencrantz and Guildenstern sincerely want to
    help their friend. By serving the King, they
    believe they are serving Hamlet as well. When
    Hamlet discovers the plot, he arranges for
    Rosencrantzs and Guildensterns executions.
    Hamlet feels no guilt over their deaths,
    believing they should not have come between
    mighty opposites (5.2.62). By getting Hamlet
    out of Denmark, they lay the foundation for his
    dramatic return in Act 5.
  • In Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1966),
  • Tom Stoppard develops the story of this
    unfortunate pair.

31
Women in the Play
  • The kingdom of Denmark is dominated by men.
    Indeed, Gertrude and Ophelia are the only two
    women characters in the play with speaking parts
    over twenty male characters speak!
  • The men dominate the political and domestic
    dramas. Claudius uses Gertrude to gain power,
    and Polonius tries to use Ophelia to solidify his
    position in the court. Polonius exposes Ophelia
    to Hamlets abuse, which results in her madness.
    Both women are abused, and seem to possess little
    power or inclination to defend themselves.
  • Hamlet is directed by his fathers ghost to take
    revenge on Claudius, not his mother (1.5), which
    implies her powerlessness. The ghost appears to
    remind Hamlet of this during the sons rough
    treatment of his mother in her bedroom (3.4).
  • Hamlet seems to speak for those in power or those
    who seek increased power when he says, Frailty,
    thy name is woman (1.2.146), a characterization
    Gertrude and Ophelia live up to, no doubt,
    because of the chauvinistic nature of this
    courts culture.

32
Christianity
  • Shakespeare fills Hamlet with a strong Christian
    underpinning. Consider, among others, the
    following images and lines
  • - The ghost is from purgatory (1.5.10-25).
  • - Claudius implores the angels for help as he
    prays in his private chapel (3.3).
  • - Hamlet tells Ophelia that all men have original
    sin (1.2.132).
  • - Hamlet does not commit suicide because its
    against Gods canon (1.2.132)
  • - Hamlet evokes O all you host of heaven at the
    beginning of the play (1.5.93), and at the end he
    asks heaven to forgive Laertes (5.2.334).
  • Consider Maynard Macks statement Throughout
    the play, the idea of Denmark as a possible type
    of the fallen garden is kept before us (Killing
    the King).

33
Graveyard Scene (5.1)
  • The tone of the graveyard scene is at first
    darkly humorous with the banter of the two clowns
    and then Hamlets examination of skulls,
    including Yoricks skull and Hamlets reference
    to Alexander the Great.
  • The tone shifts, however, during Hamlets
    consideration of Yorick. Hamlet becomes
    eulogistic, sincerely mournful, and respectful of
    Yoricks memory.
  • The tone becomes more sorrowful and passionate
    with the entrance of Ophelias corpse, even
    melodramatic with Laertes display of grief, and
    finally antagonistic as Hamlet comes forward to
    mock Laertes.
  • This penultimate scene reminds the audience of
    many of the plays themes lifes vicissitudes,
    lifes brevity, death as the great equalizer,
    human folly and vanity, flattery, violence,
    revenge, love, and false displays.

34
For Further Consideration
  • Compare Hamlet as a tragic figure with Othello or
    Oedipus.
  • Any staging of Hamlet requires careful attention.
    How would you stage the appearance of the ghost,
    The Mousetrap, and the graveyard scene? Consider
    especially the use of lighting and the
    positioning of the characters.
  • Identify two scenes in which the characters
    speeches shift between verse and prose. Explain
    the significance of these shifts. (Try, for
    example, the scene with Hamlet and the players,
    2.2.)

35
For Further Consideration continued
  • There are several film versions of Hamlet readily
    available. Select three versions of the same
    soliloquy. Discuss the differences, focusing on
    the actors and directors choices. What makes
    the three Hamlets very different characters?
    What parts of Hamlets personality does each
    actor emphasize?
  • Does Hamlet have an Oedipus Complex? Discuss how
    his mothers marriage separates him from her, his
    reference to the marriage as incest, and his
    anxiety about sex (tells Ophelia to Get thee to
    a nunnry and tells her we will have no more
    marriage, 3.1). You might see how directors
    make use of this possibility. Oliviers Hamlet
    gives his mother an extended kiss, and Gibsons
    Hamlet demonstrates the possibility in the
    confrontation between mother and son in the
    bedchamber.
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