Topic > The presentation of Hamlet in the play of William Shakespeare

The presentation of Hamlet in the play of William Shakespeare“Hamlet”, the story of a Danish prince whose uncle kills the prince's father, marries his mother and claims the throne but the prince manages to kill his uncle for revenge, is open to many forms of interpretation since the plot of the work explores difficult themes such as the impossibility of having certainties, the complexity of acting, the mystery of death and the nation as something “rotten”. Shakespeare made Hamlet a philosophically minded prince who delays taking action because his knowledge of his uncle's crime is so uncertain, he blames himself for not acting against his father's murderer: "O what a thief and peasant slave am I!" and calls himself a coward. Before this, in a soliloquy on suicide, ("Oh, that this too solid flesh would melt, / Melt and resolve itself into dew") Hamletex states that he wishes he could die as the world is painful To live, he bitterly wishes that God did not make suicide a sin; However, in the Christian framework of the work, a person who commits suicide, commits himself to eternal suffering in hell. The play can be seen in a political perspective; the well-being of the royal family and the health of the state as a whole are continually portrayed as threatened and ailing, but Hamlet is perhaps the hero who resists this regime. According to one critic, Hamlet has fascinated audiences and readers for centuries because he is "enigmatic". According to one critic, Hamlet is a “subtle and complex” character. He is overwhelmed by the emotional trauma caused by the grief of his dead father and his mother's hasty and incestuous marriage... middle of the paper... Denmark's political pressures and I believe this is the most central and obvious interpretation compared to the opinions that he harbors an asexual desire for his mother or that he is the spirit of political resistance to a corrupt regime. Polonius says "How pregnant are [Hamlet's] answers sometimes", this may suggest Hamlet's poetic ability to use words artistically; in this case he uses them to appear crazy. We get a sense of sensitivity from Hamlet as he appears to be morally right, for example, when he wants revenge against Claudius, he builds himself up as “honor is at stake” but in the end he says “let my thoughts be bloody, or let them be nothing”. worth it”: he still does not say “my actions are bloody” which shows that he wants to be a man of action but such action conflicts with his conscience.