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Essay On The Discourse Of Gender In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

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12 English – Hamlet Speech – Paige Street – Mr Rhodes
The discourse of gender in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet presents an undoubtable polarity between the behaviour and socialization of male and female characters. This process thus accounts for the mores and norms which each gender is accustomed to, be it deriving from position in society, actions, or sins. For the characters in the play, following the ‘natural order’ which positions men at a higher social standing than women, is crucial in avoiding chaos for both the individual and the community and thus any disruption of this hierarchy is met with fearful consequences. The Shakespearean societal structure is an example of Patriarchy at its finest. Hamlet is a Shakespearean tragedy which creates …show more content…

As a result of her lost and inferior identity, her madness sets her up as the classic female Shakespearean tragedy. She is torn between her loyalties to her father and lover, and after the loss of both she is cut loose from her puppet masters and becomes an instrument of her own downfall. For an Elizabethan audience, her madness would have been used as an example of the tragic consequences and loss of identity after the dismissal of male dominance. This compared to a more modern view which would perhaps interpret her madness as a form of liberation and an admirable assertion of strength. Her suicide advocates that she is unable to recognise herself in male absence. This is possibly read as a gender-inflicted madness and thus her suicide is the only independent decision she is to make. What today would have been seen as strength, for an Elizabethan audience the assertion of a woman’s opinions is the result of insanity. This notion is explored during Ophelia’s only focus scene where she hides insults behind melodic singing, beautiful flowers, and dismissed madness. She inadvertently exposes Gertrude as being a part of a deceit and possibly incestual love affair through her handing out of daisies and rue flowers to the Queen (IV, V, 181), a controversial act to an Elizabethan yet a brave and bold act to a contemporary

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