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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page paper which examines why many consider this play one of the greatest works in Western literature. No additional sources are used.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGhamgreat.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
power of words. The Bard understood why to say, and perhaps most importantly, how to say it. One of the most renowned actors of the twentieth century and
the most acclaimed performer of Shakespeares works, Sir Laurence Olivier, was once quoted as saying that he believed Hamlet to be, "pound for pound, the greatest play ever written."
It continues to be analyzed and critically interpreted well into the twenty-first century. The reasons for its enduring appeal as one of the preeminent works in Western literature include
its perfect structure, the innovative use of language, and the timelessness of its themes. Hamlet is a textbook example of a literary tragedy, as defined by Aristotle in Poetics.
The quintessential tragedy focuses on a flawed hero, an adequate description of Shakespeares protagonist, Prince Hamlet of Denmark. His actions are not only responsible for sowing the seeds of
his own eventual destruction but have tragic consequences for everyone around him. The scenes are tightly woven together and gradually build in dramatic intensity until the climax - the
showdown between Hamlet and King Claudius - in the plays final act. Shakespeare hooks the audience because nothing is ever quite as it seems. Is Hamlets revenge motivated
by a desire to avenge his fathers murder or is it sparked by the betrayal he feels over his mothers sudden remarriage? Are his feelings for Gertrude incestuous?
Perhaps the most frequently debated question is: Was Hamlet truly mad? While it may have begun as a masquerade, his later irrational acts such as his lack of remorse
for accidentally killing Polonius are not exactly the signs of a rational man. Ambiguity is precisely the point, for this forces readers to draw their own conclusions. The
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