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The Role Of Women In Shakespeare's Hamlet

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Shakespeare is known to implement his own feelings and ideas into his plays. This is evident in Shakespeare's play “Hamlet,” where Shakespeare displayed many of the ideas of the time, while including his personal ideas. He did so by using characters to outwardly say things, and he also used allusions brought about by character actions. Throughout the entire play, many things are said and portrayed, such as the idea that women are treated unfairly. Because Shakespeare made it this way, he is clearly trying to expose the harsh reality of how women of his time are treated.
In Shakespeare's time, the late fifteen hundreds and early sixteen hundreds, women were not treated fairly. In Amy Kings article, she explains how “women were treated as inferior beings,” and she goes on to list the reasons as to why women were thought to be inferior. To show just how hard it was for women to reverse this thinking, Amy King includes one of the ludicrous reasons, which was “Men argued that women were not capable of higher thinking because their skulls were smaller.” This shows what kind of reasoning women were up against. Women were thought to be meant to “have children and look after them,” and in everything else they would need guidance from a male. Not all males thought this way, and this is evident in literature such as shakespeare’s plays.
In “Hamlet,” one of the larger roles played by a woman would be Hamlet's mother. Hamlet's mother finds herself marrying her deceased husband's brother,

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