Home > Shakespearean Criticism > Hamlet (Vol. 82) - Zdravko Planinc (essay date summer/winter 1998)

Hamlet (Vol. 82) - Zdravko Planinc (essay date summer/winter 1998)

Zdravko Planinc (essay date summer/winter 1998)

SOURCE: Planinc, Zdravko. “‘It begins with Pyrrhus’ (2.2.451): The Political Philosophy of Hamlet.Hamlet Studies 20, nos. 1/2 (summer/winter 1998): 35-49.

[In the following essay, Planinc contends that Hamlet is evidence that Shakespeare's abilities as a political philosopher are on par with those of Plato. Planinc asserts that both King Hamlet and King Claudius come up short as Platonic ideals, but that Shakespeare endowed Prince Hamlet with the greatness of mind to become Plato's philosopher-king.]

Shakespeare is as good a political philosopher as Plato. And if he had had a Socrates to write about, he would have been better. As it is, his portrayal of Hamlet, a contemplative prince struggling to attain intellectual and spiritual maturity, as well as his rightful crown, is as close as anything we have in literature to Plato's account of the difficult education of...

[The entire page is 6735 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: