SHAKESPEARE’S
Hamlet
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
1564-1616Lived in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth (Elizabethan Age)
• the most fertile period of the Renaissance
Influenced by other famous authors who also lived during this time period--all of these playwrights were concerned with issues such as the supernatural and classic themes.
MORE ON WILLIAM, MY LOVE…
Construction of England’s first public theatre was when he was 12.He attended the local grammar school and studied the classics. Shakespeare devoted most of his life to writing plays, however he did elect to act in a few
• (Known to have played the ghost in Hamlet)
Globe Theatre in 1598 held 2000-3000 spectators
W H Y W A S S H A K E S P E A R E P O P U L A R ?
•Monarchs liked him• Varying types of loves are emphasized• Raised moral questions about suicide, love, hatred, etc. • Interacted with audience
WHY WASN’T SHAKESPEARE POPULAR?
•New words, phrases and use of
language
•Plays too loosely put together
•Most criticism comes from people
who don’t understand them.
“THE PLAY’S THE THING…”
A little background
info on the play
Hamlet…
HAMLET
Written c. 1600 AD
Hamlet is a tragedy• Tragedy: the main character undergoes a
struggle and suffers a downfall…
Hamlet a tragic hero?• Tragic Hero: a character of great importance or
noble heritage, whose fatal flaw (and sometimes fate) brings about a tragic downfall.
MORE ON HAMLETHamlet is thought to be based on a Danish tale Ur-Hamlet Hamlet is the most well-known Shakespearean work
• Hamlet is often alluded to in pop culture Some of Hamlet’s innermost thoughts are often quoted (look in the 7 Hamlet Soliloquies!)
THE HISTORICAL HAMLET
There was a Danish king named “Amleth” who is supposed to be the basis of Shakespeare’s main character.He lived during the Dark Ages, c. 700.Amleth’s father (the king) was assassinated by Amleth’s uncle, who then became king instead of Amleth.Amleth eventually killed his uncle and took the crown back, ruling Denmark for many years.
• He was eventually killed in battle and, interestingly, his wife married the man who killed him (you’ll understand the later).
HAMLET AS A REVENGE PLAY
“Revenge” play: the hero of the story seeks bloody justice for the wrongful acts of a villain(s) -Characters in the play are members of a tight-knit family-One family member is summoned to avenge a family member’s death-A ghost or a dream incites the avenger to do his bloody business-By the last act the stage is literally filled with carnage
HAMLET AS A PROBLEM PLAY
•Considered one of the most problematic texts in all of literature•Focuses on complications from love, death, & betrayal without offering a solid resolution.
SUB PLOT- CONFLICT W/ FORTINBRAS
Fortinbras’ father, King of Norway, was killed during battle for control of “a little patch of ground”(4.4, 19).
• Lost this land to Hamlet Sr.Hamlet and Fortinbras both lost their fathers and have sworn to avenge their deaths,Character Foil: A minor character, whose contrast highlights characteristics of the main character
• Fortinbras is a man of action vs. Hamlet who is a thinking man.
• Fortinbras and Laertes are parallels of Hamlet
DRAMA TERMS…
Comic relief: Where the author adds some
comedy to a drama
DRAMATIC DEVICES
Soliloquy: a dramatic monologue that represents a series of unspoken reflections
Aside: a character on stage speaks to the audience.
Play within in a play: one story is told during the action of another story
LITERARY DEVICES
Pun: a word with multiple meanings.
Example: “I am too much in the sun.”Foreshadowing: when the author hints at what’s to come.
Example: “There’s something rotten in
the state of Denmark…”
LITERARY DEVICES
Poetry vs. Prose: iambic pentameter (blank verse-
poetry that has 10 syllables per line with every other
syllable emphasized)
vs. regular speech.
Dramatic Irony: When the audience knows
something the characters do not.
FUN FACTS Hamlet was written in 1600 BC but set in the Middle Ages.Hamlet a Renaissance or Medieval man?Hamlet is a play of questions-
421 question marksThe word “question” appears
15 times
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
What is the nature of the relationships? (Hamlet and Ophelia/
Hamlet and Gertrude)
Who or what is the cause of corruption?
How is Hamlet a tragic hero?
Why does Hamlet hesitate?
Is Hamlet really insane?
What motivates characters?
How does form enhance meaning?
THEMES/MOTIFS
A theme is a broad message, or moral of a story.
The message may be about life, society, or human
nature. Often explore timeless and universal ideas
and are almost always implied rather than stated
explicitly.
A motif is any recurring element that has symbolic
significance in a story.
Appearance vs. Reality
Role of Women
Poison, Corruption, Rot
(Plague)
Revenge v. Reason
Action v. Inaction
THEMES/MOTIFS (CONT.)
Time
Religious Imagery
Sanity
Supernatural Elements
Hubris
Oedipal Complex
THE END