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How Does Hamlet Influence Elizabethan Culture

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Of the many reasons for which playwright William Shakespeare is famous, one of the most prevalent is the way he assimilates Elizabethan Era history and culture into his work. For example, his play Hamlet explores the roles and expectations of women in 16th century England by emphasizing the main character’s disgust with his mother after she remarries the brother of his dead father. Cultural context from this time period details the simultaneous praising and shunning of Elizabethan women as both docile beings and creatures capable of sin and deceit. This context shapes Hamlet by emphasizing the extremity and understanding of Hamlet’s despair and the queen’s wrongdoing in the eyes of the Elizabethan Era people. One of the most striking aspects …show more content…

In reality, 16th century women were heavily oppressed and trained to be pure and obedient to their husbands. With no real niche in society apart from child rearing and household duties, they were forced to be dependent on their husbands and were shunned for stepping out of line in thought, promiscuity, or vanity (Andre, 83). Remarriage of widows was extremely discouraged because it was thought widows should live on in obedience to their husband’s memory in order to reach salvation with God (Todd, 67-69). In this context, Hamlet’s mother broke all of the rules and sinned greatly by failing to grieve extensively and entering into matrimony with his brother on such short notice, especially when marriage at the time was held to be a revered, well-judged decision that required long thought and commitment. Women were seen as “a paragon of virtue and modesty,” yet also weak in the face of sin (Andre, 77). Thus Hamlet proclaims in his soliloquy, “Frailty, thy name is woman!” (Shakespeare, 937) and the queen becomes an example of a sinful woman with weak

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