Hamlet | Overviews of Hamlet
The following two full-length essays provide an in-depth survey of the dramatic action and major themes in Hamlet. In the first, David Bevington focuses on Hamlet's role in the play by examining his interactions with other characters and his soliloquies. In the second essay, Maynard Mack provides a general analysis of Hamlet. Mack discusses three aspects of the play: its mysteriousness, the relationship between appearance and reality, and a concept the critic terms "mortality."
David Bevington
[Bevington presents an in-depth survey of the dramatic action and major themes of Hamlet. The critic initially focuses on Hamlet's role in the play, examining his interactions with the other characters as well as his several soliloquies in an attempt to determine his "tragic flaw," the defect in a tragic hero which leads to his downfall. (A soliloquy is a speech delivered while the speaker is alone, devised to inform the reader of what the character is thinking or to provide essential information concerning other participants in the action.) Bevington...
[The entire page is 11534 words long]
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