Sunday, January 19, 2020
Hamlet as a Tragic Hero :: Shakespeare Hamlet Essays
     Hamlet as a Tragic Hero                      William Shakespeare, the greatest playwright of the English language,    wrote a total of 37 plays in his lifetime, all of which can be categorized under    tragedy, comedy, or history.  The Tragedy of Hamlet, Shakespeare's most popular    and greatest tragedy, displays his genius as a playwright, as literary critics    and academic commentators have found an unusual number of themes and literary    techniques present in Hamlet.  Hamlet concerns the murder of the king of Denmark    and the murdered king's son's quest for revenge.  Its main character, Hamlet,    possesses a tragic flaw which obstructs his desire for revenge and ultimately    brings about his death.  This tragic flaw makes him a tragic hero, a character    who is destroyed because of a major weakness, as his death at the end could    possibly have been avoided were it not for his tragic flaw.  Hamlet's flaw of    irresolution, the uncertainty on how to act or proceed, is shown when Hamlet    sees a play and the passion the actors had, after Hamlet's third soliloquy, in    Hamlet's fourth soliloquy,  and in Hamlet's indecisive pursuit in avenging his    father's death.                 First, Hamlet's flaw of irresolution is shown when he sees a play and    the passion one particular actor had. A group of players has arrived and Hamlet    arranges a personal viewing of The Murder of Gonzago with a small portion of his    own lines inserted.  Hamlet then observes one portion of the play in which one    of the players put on a great display of emotion.  Hamlet, besieged by guilt and    self-contempt,  remarks in his second soliloquy of Hamlet of the emotion this    player showed despite the fact that the player had nothing to be emotional about.     Hamlet observed that he himself had all the reason in the world to react with    great emotion and sorrow, yet he failed to show any that could compare with the    act of the player.  Hamlet calls himself a "rogue and peasant slave" and a "dull    and muddy-mettled rascal" who, like a "John-a-dreams", can take no action.    Hamlet continues his fiery speech by degrading himself and resoluting to take    some sort of action to revenge his father's death.              Next, Hamlet's flaw of irresolution is shown after his third soliloquy, the    famed "To be or not to beâ⬠¦" lines.  Hamlet directly identifies his own tragic    flaw, remarking of his own inability to act. Hamlet, unsure whether or not the    his uncle Claudius was responsible for his father's murder, schemes to have The    Murder of Gonzago presented to the royal court, with a few minor changes, so its    					    
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