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Hamlet Plan of lectures

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Hamlet Plan of lectures Revenge and the ghost Just how crazy is Hamlet? The theme of mortality Meta-theatricality Preliminaries: first, the strange text of Hamlet Our ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hamlet Plan of lectures


1
HamletPlan of lectures
  1. Revenge and the ghost
  2. Just how crazy is Hamlet?
  3. The theme of mortality
  4. Meta-theatricality

2
Preliminaries first, the strange text of Hamlet
  • Our edition (Pelican), edited from the second
    quarto (Q2), is approximately 3,674 lines long.
  • Far too long to play (four hours if played).
    (Elizabethan plays took two to two and a half
    hours to play.)
  • Probably Q2 is Shakespeares early draft of the
    play.
  • The Folio version (F) is 3,535 lines long, still
    far to long to play.
  • Probably F is a revised version of the play it
    lacks much of IV.4, including Hs soliloquy
    there.
  • Some scholars think F is a clearer version of the
    play, suggesting revision.
  • The first quarto (Q1) is much shorter, 2,154, and
    looks like a playing version of the play.
  • Some scenes are in a different (maybe better)
    order.
  • But Q1 gives us a weird version of the text,
    certainly not Shakespeares actual language.
  • Q1 derives from an actors version of the play
    from memory only Marcellus lines are accurate.

3
The puzzling text (continued)
  • So a modern production needs to decide which
    text, Q2 or F, to use, then how to cut about a
    third of the text.
  • Earlier editions gave us a Hamlet that was
    conflated from Q2 and F an even longer play.
  • Branaghs film of the uncut Hamlet is
    interesting, but something that was almost
    certainly never played in Shakespeares time.
  • But what was played?
  • What were reading in the Pelican text is
    probably Shakespeares early complete draft.
  • Which he had to cut for playing.
  • Look for extra F passages on pp. li-lv of Pelican
    if youre missing some familiar passages.

4
Second, five open questions in Hamlet
  • Is Hamlet mad or not? He says he will play mad
    (put on an antic disposition, 1.5.171-72), but
    then later tells Laertes that it was his
    madness that killed Polonius, not Hamlet
    (5.2.231-240).
  • Does Gertrude know about the murder of Hamlets
    father? Hamlet thinks she does, but she seems
    shocked at his accusation (3.4.29-31).
  • Did Ophelia really commit suicide? Gertrudes
    account indicates it was an accident
    (4.7.166-184). The coroner rules it Christian
    burial. But the gravediggers have their doubts
    (5.1.1-30), and the priest says the death was
    doubtful, and the funeral rites are truncated
    (5.1.228-236).
  • Why did she go mad? The death of her father? Or
    Hamlets rejection of her?
  • Does the play-within-the-play evoke Claudius
    guilt? Or is it Hamlets commentary (3.2.267-70).

5
Third, R.I. P. tragic flaw
  • Aristotle invented the tragic flaw hamartia.
  • But was it part of current discourse in 1590s?
  • Heres what Olivier did with tragic flaw in his
    1948 film (clip).
  • Admittedly Shakespeare seems to bring up the
    issue at I, 4, 23ff.
  • But how much does tragic flaw ever tell us?
    Othello is jealous, Macbeth is ambitious, Lear is
    old and losing his mind, Romeo loves too rashly?
  • And Hamlet does make up his mind at III, 3, 73ff
    maybe thats the problem.

6
Now, the lecture that damned ghost or is he?
  • Hamlet a revenge play, a popular dramatic genre.
  • Thomas Kyds The Spanish Tragedy (1592),
    Marstons Antonios Revenge (1600), Middletons
    Revengers Tragedy (p. 1607), Chapmans Bussy
    DAmbois (1604), Shakespeares own earlyTitus
    Andronicus (p. 1594).
  • Elements of revenge plays ghost demanding
    vengeance, real or feigned madness,
    plays-within-plays, scenes of carnage and
    mutilation, ingenious ways to accomplish
    vengeance.

7
Hamlet as revenge play
  • Horatios conclusion V, 2, 380-87 So shall you
    hear of carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts . . .
  • But atypical in its psychological complexity
    and length.
  • Ghost kept off stage for four scenes a half
    hour of playing time?
  • Issue of revenge kept in suspense.
  • The strange character of this ghost where from?
    What to make of him?

8
Film clip of ghosts appearance
9
The ghost of Hamlet Sr.
  • The ghost is real on stage this must be a very
    solid, opaque ghost, no see-though or imaginary
    figure.
  • Is the ghost from Purgatory?
  • Purgatory a hot-button issue in Elizabethan
    England.
  • Ghost asserts Purgatory as its origin I.5, 3-4,
    9-13.
  • This puts it among the saved, a spirit of
    health, as H. says (I, 4, 40).
  • But can it then ask for vengeance?

10
If the ghost simply wants justice. . .
  • . . . how should it ask for vengeance?
  • Can Hamlet be simply an instrument of Gods
    justice?
  • If he can, how should the crime and the
    punishment be presented?
  • At the end of the speech But howsomever thou
    pursues this act,/ Taint not thy mind, nor let
    thy soul contrive/ Against thy mother aught.
    Leave her to heaven/ And to those thorns that in
    her bosom lodge/ To prick and sting her. (I, 5,
    84-88).
  • Hamlet must become like the executioner, who is
    disengaged from the act of taking life.

11
But the rhetoric of the ghosts speech cuts
against this
  • The horror of his prison house I, 5, 12ff.
  • Rhetoric of bitterness I, 5, 42ff.
  • Rhetoric of betrayal.
  • Highly physiological description of crime.
  • Everything in the speech seems designed to elicit
    an extreme emotional reaction from Hamlet.
  • Line 80 O, horrible, O horrible, most
    horrible!
  • Then the strange coda dont taint your mind or
    harm your mother.

12
Can one take a life without tainting his mind?
  • The public executioner.
  • Anonymous, hooded.
  • Asked forgiveness of his client.
  • Acted simply on behalf of the state.
  • Maintained his own disinvolvement with the act of
    taking life.
  • Can Hamlet attain this state of moral neutrality?

13
The nature of the ghosts charge to Hamlet
  • Kill your uncle, your fathers cold-blooded
    killer . . .
  • . . . who led your mother to adulterous betrayal
    of your father . . .
  • . . . who killed me in a particularly horrible
    way . . .
  • . . . and left your father no time for a proper
    death (confession, communion) . . .
  • BUT dont taint your mind, or harm your mother
    (while killing her current husband).
  • Can any of this be done?

14
The effect on Hamlet?
  • His invocation of heaven and earth (I.5.92ff)
    and what else, hell? Oh fie! seems to reject
    hell.
  • Hell forget everything except the ghosts
    command.
  • Is Hamlet a bit mad when he rejoins his
    companions?
  • Horatio These are but wild and whirling words,
    my lord.
  • Hamlet driven to extremity by the ghost?

15
Hamlet tests the ghost
  • II.2.537ff. Admits the ghost may be a devil sent
    to trick him to damnation.
  • So the plays the thing/ Wherein Ill catch the
    conscience of the king!
  • The Mousetrap indeed appears to catch the
    kings conscience.
  • Horatio seems to agree that Claudiuss guilt is
    apparent.
  • Having tested the ghost, Hamlet now morally bound
    to act?
  • But see the divided rhetoric of III, 2, 381ff. I
    will speak daggers, but use none.

16
The scene that indicates Hamlets seeming
readiness to act
  • The time and place of III, 3, 36ff Claudius
    appears to be praying.
  • The perfect moment for execution?
  • Enter Hamlet ready to act the executioner.
  • But he decides not to execute Claudius. Why?
  • How does he now conceive of his revenge?
  • Does he taint his mind in this redefining of
    vengeance?
  • Given this motivation, is not acting worse than
    acting at this point?

17
The closet scene with Gertrude
  • The decisive moment when Hamlet, previously agent
    of vengeance, turns murderer himself.
  • Line 21 indicates Hamlet seems to threaten
    violence to Gertrude.
  • Accuses her of murder of Hamlet Sr.
  • Insists on the comparison of her two husbands,
    ll. 53ff.
  • His insistence on her corruption, 91ff, 96ff.

18
Return of the ghost To whet thy almost blunted
purpose
  • Hamlet seems to admit his having failed to act at
    the right moment ll. 106ff.
  • Amazement on thy mother sits./ O step between
    her and her fighting soul!
  • The second part of the ghosts command nor let
    thy soul contrive against thy mother aught.
  • Has he offended against this too?
  • His seeming obsession with his mothers
    corruption ll. 181ff.

19
The impossibility of Hamlets position
  • The ghost whips him to an emotional fury against
    both Claudius and Gertrude.
  • Then tells him not to taint his mind or harm his
    mother.
  • Hes to kill his uncle, who has killed his father
    in cold blood, but not taint his mind with
    passion or anger.
  • Hes to murder his mothers husband, but not
    contrive against her.
  • These two scenes the turning point of the play?
  • Now the Polonius family have precisely the same
    motive of vengeance against Hamlet as he has
    against Claudius.
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