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Essay on The Character Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

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The Character Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

Ophelia is the daughter of Polonius, the right hand man of the King. Although she is only in five scenes Ophelia plays an interesting role in this play as the seemingly passive, melancholy, innocent 'little girl' whose story ends in tragedy. From the beginning Ophelia is an obedient character who has real trouble thinking for herself. This could be seen as one of the reasons for her eventual downfall, due to her inability to analyse a strange, complicated pattern of events. She is always accepting other people's views or advice, acting upon them, with no thought or interpretation of what the results could be. This is one of the reasons why her suicide …show more content…

"I shall the effect of this good lesson keep."

We can see in this opening scene Ophelia's instant inability to think for herself, accepting but also willing to act upon the views, interpretation, and wishes of her brother. In the play there is a recurring theme of conforming to the wishes of her family. However, this is not the interest as to accept the wishes of your family was then, and is still accepted as completely normal, but it is whether she is knowingly accepting her family to analyse and interpret for her or she is just accepting the wishes of her family and doesn't have the capacity to think in terms of analysation and interpretation

Another factor of Ophelia's character is the time in which the play was written. In this era (and I would say up to the 1900's) women were always treated as being inferior to men. They were taught to obey the wishes of men as women were seen as having fewer life skills. They weren't allowed to vote and had absolutely no role in society apart from mothering and looking after the home. In this era women were always taught to be subordinate to men, and in this Ophelia can be seen as the perfect woman in her first two scenes.

In Act 3 Scene 1 Shakespeare begins with Hamlet's soliloquy in which he contemplates the meaning of life, with gratuitous references to death, life and suicide.

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