Hamlet's Ophelia: The Changing Perceptions of Suicide, Death, and Madness in the Elizabethan and Victorian Periods


Autoria(s): Parrott, Katherine
Data(s)

01/01/2010

Resumo

William Shakespeare's Hamlet, Prince of Denmark has been the source of question, debate, and research since its theatrical debut. In the midst of readings performances and one particular question has remained open and unresolved: was Ophelia's death an accident or a suicide? Some see Ophelia's death as an accident; others see it as a suicide resulting from the accumulation of a series of unfortunate events: her rejection by her boyfriend, her father’s murder, and her possible pregnancy. This paper will explore that age-old question from the perspectives of two historically different audiences: those of sixteenth-century and nineteenth-century England. I will argue that, despite the 300-year expanse between these two audiences, both emerged with the same conclusion: Ophelia's death was accidental. However, cultural and scientific changes affected the reasons why each came to that conclusion.

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/honorstheses/78

Publicador

Digital Commons @ Winthrop University

Fonte

Honors Program Theses

Palavras-Chave #Hamlet #Ophelia #death #suicide #accidents #Classical Literature and Philology #Theatre and Performance Studies
Tipo

text