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Hamlet

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Hamlet Day Two ENGL 305 Dr. Fike Outlines MLA format get straight on this. WC list one continuous list, not primary and secondary lists. Every paper should have a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hamlet


1
Hamlet
  • Day Two
  • ENGL 305
  • Dr. Fike

2
Outlines
  • MLA formatget straight on this.
  • WC listone continuous list, not primary and
    secondary lists.
  • Every paper should have a review of criticism.
  • You must have at least 5 critical sources
    (criticism on your play).
  • You need to learn how to write a research paper.
  • Go to the Writing Center.
  • Have a conference with me.
  • Do another draft of your outline.
  • Apply the elements of critical thinking, as I
    have modeled below in this presentation.

3
Group Activity
  • Passages 1.2.129ff., 2.2.549ff., and 3.1.56ff.
  • You will start with one soliloquy and rotate
    twice so that you talk about all three.
  • First station Generate questions about the
    soliloquy that you have been assigned. Write
    your questions on the board (or big sheets of
    paper).
  • Second station Respond to the questions left by
    the previous group. Write your answers on the
    board (or big sheets).
  • Third station Respond to the answers left by
    the previous group. Write your responses as
    before. Then appoint one person to present the
    content of the written material at your third
    station to the rest of the class.

4
Large-Group Discussion
  • What did you learn about your soliloquy?

5
A Traditional Perspective on Revenge
  • 4.5.134ff. To hell, allegiance! Vows, to the
    blackest devil! / Conscience and grace, to the
    profoundest pit! / I dare damnation. To this
    point I stand, / That both the worlds I give to
    negligence, / Let come what comes, only Ill be
    revenged / Most throughly for my father.
  • 4.7.127 Laertes wants To cut his Hamlets
    throat i the church.
  • 4.7.129 The king says, Revenge should have no
    bounds.

6
POINT
  • What unifies all three soliloquies is Hamlets
    theological perspective he thinks about the
    relationship between his actions and the
    afterlife.

7
To be or not to be, etc.
  • For a detailed analysis of Hamlets To be or not
    to be soliloquy, see the next slides from my
    article Thinking in a Discipline An Assignment
    in Critical Thinking Class, The CEA Forum 36.2
    (2007).
  • If time remains (or on your own), apply the
    elements of critical thinking to this speech.

8
To be or not to be via the Elements from CRTW
201
  • The context is a murder mystery in which Hamlet
    is planning, at this moment, to trick Claudius
    into revealing his guilt with the help of the
    players.
  • The point of view is that of a young man whose
    psychomachia (soul struggle) involves competing
    imperatives such as mother and father, reason and
    emotion, duty and caution, scholar and warrior,
    womanliness and what a critic calls tough,
    fatalistic cool (Rogers-Gardner 35) and whose
    psyche is beset by melancholy, acedia, and
    depersonalization (that is, a disconnection from
    his feminine side).

9
More
  • The question at issue is not the one that Hamlet
    himself asks Why would one stay in this life
    and put up with fardels (burdens) when suicide
    is an option? Nor is it the question that
    students often assume it to be namely, should
    Hamlet kill himself? It is instead a more
    general question that is not directly stated
    What course of action should one take in the
    face of worldly obstacles? In other words, as
    the absence of the pronoun I indicates, the
    question is less personal and practical than it
    is general and philosophical.

10
Still More
  • His purpose, then, is to analyze the options or
    alternatives, which are these endure passively,
    confront actively, or commit suicide. In
    exploring these alternatives, Hamlet has some
    information to go on everyone ages, rulers
    oppress, the prideful insult, love stinks, law is
    slow, administrators suck, and merit does not
    always mean advancement.

11
More Elements
  • Although he assumes that he cannot tell the
    nature of the afterlife, the passage identifies
    competing alternatives when we shuffle off our
    mortal coil, as a snake sheds its skin, the
    resulting state may be the end of individual
    consciousness or a state in which dreams may be
    more problematic than the worldly troubles left
    behind. If, as Hamlet mentions in a previous
    passage, God has fixed / His canon gainst
    self-slaughter (1.2.132-33), then the
    implication and consequence of suicide would be
    damnation, which is also a key concept in
    Hamlets soliloquy, along with conscience and
    sin.

12
Final Slide
  • His conclusionand here he finally switches from
    third person singular to first person plural,
    presumably in order to include himselfis that
    thought, by which he means over-analysis,
    prevents a thinking person from taking his own
    life or taking arms against his sea of
    troubles. The soliloquy ends with this
    statement to Ophelia, which Hamlet probably says
    under his breath Nymph, in thy orisons / Be
    all my sins remembered, which implies his own
    Claudius-like inability to pray.
    END
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