Hamlet | Ophelia

In the first selection, Theodore Lidz maintains that while Shakespeare remains ambiguous about the reality of the prince's madness, he portrays Ophelia as classically insane. J. Dover Wilson, in the second excerpt from his acclaimed What Happens in Hamlet, provides a detailed interpretation of the "nunnery scene" between Hamlet and Ophelia in Act III, scene i. The critic discusses Ophelia's role as a decoy, describing how she makes the prince suspicious of a plot by overplaying her part when returning his love letters.

Theodore Lidz

[Lidz argues that Shakespeare dramatized Ophelia's madness to provide a countertheme to action surrounding Hamlet's own insanity. But whereas the playwright remains ambiguous about the reality of the prince's madness, the critic continues, he portrays Ophelia as classically insane. According to Lidz, Ophelia's descent into madness does not merely result from her father's murder, but rather his murder by Hamlet, whom she loves. As a result Ophelia is placed in "the intolerable predicament of having to turn away from the person she loves and idealizes because...

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