context hamlet Flashcards

1
Q

Elizabethan monarchy (4)

A
  • mary queen of Scots executed
  • 5 years after Hamlet, plot to blow up the monarchy
  • there would be no heir to Elizabeths throne
  • she is succeeded by foreign prince
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2
Q

what was denmark like at the time hamlet

A

a largely Protestant nation at the time of the play’s composition.

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3
Q

why does the ghost pose a religious problem for Hamlet

A

Protestantism didn’t believe in purgatory. Hamlet is hesitant to accept the ghost’s claims that he is tormented until his life’s crimes are “purged” away.

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4
Q

what tragedy did Shakespeare suffer?

A

his father and his son died

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5
Q

what is the relevance of Wittenburg?

A

The German city of Wittenberg was the
birthplace of the Reformation – the
Protestant movement for the reform of the
Catholic church.

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6
Q

henry VIII and catherine of aragon hamlet

A

she married Henry after marrying his brother

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7
Q

what was the monarchy like in Denmark?

A

it was not successive, however to a British audience the succession of Claudius would have been unusual and suspicious.

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8
Q

what was the dual meaning of the therm nunnery?

A

could be religious training for nuns or a brothel

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9
Q

what was the opinions on women who had had sex?

A

that hysteria would be bought on due to their knowledge of sex, like Ophelia

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10
Q

how is humanism included in Hamlet?

A

humanism believes in the endless possibilities of man and mind
‘what a piece of work is a man, how noble in reason, how infinite in faculties’

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11
Q

how was honor interpreted in elizabethan england?

A
  • Male honour depended on physical courage, bravery and a propensity for violence
  • Female honour depended on chastity, fidelity and motherhood
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12
Q

what is interesting about the conversation between polonius and Hamlet on polonius acting in universtiy

A

it can be classed as metadramatic or intertextual, as they talk about Polonius playing Julius Caesar, which was performed a few years earlier, liekly by the same actors - this reference would have been comical

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13
Q

Killing the king is a …

A

Blasphemous act, going against religio he already feels he is locing
Also fratercide and regicide

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14
Q

Why is revenge such a probpem for hamlet

A

Revenge is imposed from outside by the ghost, not chosen by him

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15
Q

Short dramatic opening scene gives… hamlet

A

Sense of disruption

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16
Q

Shakespeare explots the value of time …

A

To build up illusive nature of ghosts

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17
Q

Shakespeares doublings (kin+kind, cousin+son)…

A

To emphasise a point and is a premonition of evl doubling

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18
Q

Dialogue to create setting (nipping) is a …

A

Anticipation of a ghost, and unnatural coldnes of supernatural

19
Q

Ophelia (mind and unmind)

A

Weak rhyme suggests ophelia is not very witty with deception - (god hath given you one face and you make yourself another)

20
Q

Hamlets love is hard to believe…

A

Ophelia is not once mentioned by Hamlet in the final scenes.

21
Q

The mousetraps doubling

A

Tests the ghosts for truth and Claudius for guilt
Dumb show points to it as a device for the wider plot

22
Q

Claudius’s intense guilt comes from…

A

Fratercide. First great biblical crime was Cane killing Abel

23
Q

Claudius cannot fully ask for religious redemption because…

A

He is unprepared to give up what he has gained

24
Q

Hamlet goes beyond a typical revenger because….

A

We feel pity for him across the play for all he has lost

25
Q

By act 5, hamlet has seized time…

A

As well as a plan of action

26
Q

The seven soliloquies take Hamlet from his fathers death to

A

His own which highlights his potential to be a King

27
Q

In Hamlets moral growth, hamlet moves into

A

Will. It is not a play about inaction, its a play of movement

28
Q

Hamlet is king for three minutes, and in this time pardons

A

Past, present and future
Pardons Laertes
Designates Horatio as the survivor
Names Fortinbras as King

29
Q

Hamlet as King - when you achieve perfection of your role

A

All that is left to do is die.

30
Q

Roy Lisker: hamlet poses riddles

A

For which we are invited to solve

31
Q

Roy Lisker: hamlet is nothing more than an…

A

Immature brat tied to his mothers apron strings

32
Q

Bernard Shaw: hamlet as a prehistoric

A

Dane is morally bound to kill his uncle

33
Q

Bernard Shaw: lunacy may be inspiration

A

In disguise

34
Q

Gertrude has …. Of the total play lines

A

4%, but is on stage for 10 scenes (hamlet is 14)

35
Q

Granville Barker: gertrude is ‘but a

A

Passive part in the action of the play

36
Q

When Getrude appears to give up her role as sexual object

A

Hamlet reclaims his ability to act

37
Q

Hamlet and Ophelias relatiosnhip relies on the audience to…

A

Piece together brief exchanges and infer the relationship has flourished in private

38
Q

Lee Edwards: we can imagine hamlets

A

story without Ophelia, but Ophelia literally has no story without Hamlet

39
Q

Kiernan Ryan on H + Os reciprocal madness

A

‘The only sane response in a society that no longer makes sense’

40
Q

Ickes theatre production on O + G

A

‘The production should frame Ophelia and Gertudes silence and lift those two roles’

41
Q

Rulers and religious leaders feared the doctrine of predestination would

A

Lead people to excuse traitorous acts with the excuse ’god made me do it’

42
Q

Freud remarks that ’the play is built up on hamlets hesitations

A

In fulfilling the task of revenge assigned to him, but offers no reasons for his hesitations’

43
Q

Hamlet is the enigmatic world within

A

Which human beings had to orient themselves, leaving us and the characters to grasp hamlet