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Report on

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... context of Roman Catholicism, Neo-Stoicism, and Protestantism ... Roman Catholicism ... 1. The influence of Catholicism is 'undermined by the Reformation' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Report on


1
Report on Hamlet and A Matter Tender and
Dangerous
  • Presenter
  • George Hsieh

2
Introduction
  • A. Motivation To raise the issue of the
    relation of the plays to early modern religious
    discourses.
  • B. Religion presented in Hamlet is oblique and
    inconsistent.

3
Introduction
  • C. Thesis statement The religious inconsistency
    in Hamlet is able to be resolved from a
    historicist interpretation, and in which the
    context of Roman Catholicism, Neo-Stoicism, and
    Protestantism will be included to analyze
    Hamlets subjectivity.

4
Roman Catholicism
  • A. The language and theology of Roman
    Catholicism emerge most clearly in Hamlet in the
    princes encounter with his fathers spirit,
    where the Christian and specifically purgatorial
    context that Shakespeare creates for the Ghost is
    rather surprising

5
Roman Catholicism
  • B. The historical context of Roman Catholicism in
    the 16th century England.
  • 1. The influence of Catholicism is undermined by
    the Reformation.
  • 2. By presenting the Ghost scene, Shakespeare may
    want to establish a sense of distance between
    the world of old Hamlet and the official ideology
    of contemporary England.
  • 3. Hamlets dilemma results from the conflict
    between the old society presented by the Ghost,
    in which he has to be a revengeful son, and his
    Renaissance self-conscience.

6
Political Relation in Hamlet
  • A. Renaissance court is a world of humanist
    learning, secular politics, and religious
    division, and the high aristocratic men are no
    longer bond to the old religious traditions.
  • B. Being shaped by the Renaissance Reformation,
    Hamlet unexpectedly finds himself displaced from
    the center of the court and regarded as a
    potential enemy of the state.

7
Neo-Stoicism
  • A. Stoicism counseled self-adjustment rather
    than political activism and was dismissive or
    condemning of actual efforts to change the social
    order.
  • B. An alternative offered by Claudius to Hamlet.

8
Neo-Stoicism
  • C. Stoicism plays as a refuge for Hamlet, but it
    never fully controls Hamlets behaviors. Hamlets
    instruction to the players in Act III implies
    that for Hamlet the theater is polity for
    which he prescribes an authoritarian government.
    However, by involving in the performance, in the
    world of the play the ideologies of Stoicism and
    humanism are failing more generally.

9
Protestantism
  • A. Wittenberf is the source of radical
    Protestantism, and by portraying the conflict
    within Hamlet, Shakespeare may thus refer his
    audience to a contemporary society in which the
    established church was thoroughly reformed and
    evoke Protestant associations against the
    medieval Catholic traditions still alive in the
    play.

10
Protestantism
  • B. The emphasis on individual conscience and
    freedom may derive from the Protestant.
  • C. Predestination.
  • D. Political Activeness according to the
    Protestant, the human subject of Gods grace was
    in fact less likely to be politically passive
    than to be active in the service of causes
    ratified by individual conscience.

11
Conclusion
  • Hamlet is characterized by the combination of
    religious radicalism and social conservatism,
    and the end of the play explains the difficulty
    of trying to establish the political bearing of
    Hamlets change, in which a revolution in the
    order of subjectivity assists him in bringing
    down a corrupt government but nevertheless
    confirms him as a defender of traditional
    aristocratic society.
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