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Books > Language & Literature > Literature: texts > Drama texts, plays
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The Elizabethan Hamlet (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,750
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The Elizabethan Hamlet (Hardcover)
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This original and provocative reinterpretation of Hamlet presents
the play as the original audiences would have viewed it--a much
bleaker, stronger, and more deeply religious play than it has
usually been assumed to be. Arthur McGee draws a picture of a
Devil-controlled Hamlet in the damnable Catholic court of Elsinore,
and he shows that the evil natures of the Ghost and of Hamlet
himself were understood and accepted by the Protestant audiences of
the day. Using material gleaned from an investigation of
play-censorship, McGee offers a comprehensive discussion of the
Ghost as Demon. He then moves to Hamlet, presenting him as satanic,
damned as revenger in the tradition of the Jacobean revenge drama.
There are, he shows, no good ghosts, and Purgatory, whence the
Ghost came, was reviled in Protestant England. The Ghost's
manipulation extends to Hamlet's fool/madman role, and Hamlet's
soliloquy reveals the ambition, conscience, and suicidal despair
that damn him. With this viewpoint, McGee is able to shed
convincing new light on various aspects of the play. He effectively
strips Ophelia and Laertes of their sentimentalized charm, making
them instead chillingly convincing, and he works through the last
act to show damnation everywhere. In an epilogue, he sums up the
history of criticism of Hamlet, demonstrating the process by which
the play gradually lost its Elizabethan bite. Appendixes develop
aspects of Ophelia.
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