Hamlet Context Flashcards
Genre
Tragedy
- Tragic hero suffers some form of harmartia (procrastination)
- Ends in denouement (death of hero)
- Audience supposed to feel catharsis at the end due to restoration of order
Seneca’s Tragedies
Involves heavy bloodshed and murder
- Agamemnon (ghost of Thyestes)
Shakespearean Tragedies
First tragedies were violent and cruel (Titus Andronicus), but work evolved focusing on elaborate exploration of the single mind and focused on individual suffering (Macbeth, Othello)
Revenge Tragedy
Thomas Kyd’s - The Spanish Tragedy. Features a ghost that asked for his death to be avenged, name was Horatio
James I
Publication of daemonologie. Witch trials were becoming a spectacle. Parliament passed the witchcraft act 1542. Warned against the dangers of black magic.
Audience
Both fearful and fascinated by magic and the supernatural
Elizabeth I succession
Elizabeth had no heir (children) and it was unclear who would inherit the throne after her death. She refused to name an heir which caused anxiety and unease. The throne couldn’t go to Mary of Scots but it went to her son James I.
Denmark
By basing the play in Denmark, Shakespeare is able to discuss issues in England at the time whilst avoiding the bishops ban of 1599
Mary of Scots
Like Gertrude, Mary didn’t undergo a proper mourning of her husband and proceeded to marry the man who thought to have murdered her husband.
Women
Patriarchal, misogynistic society. Elizabeth I’s femininity.
“I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart of a King, and of a King of England, too” during the Spanish Armada 1588
Shakespeare’s son
1596 : Hamnet died aged 11. Abandoned his son in infancy to pursue a career as a playwright.
Excommunication
1570 : Pope Pius V excommunicated Elizabeth I for making England a Protestant nation. She was seen as an enemy of the Catholic state.
Spy
Elizabeth I established a spy network in England. This was led by Sir Francis Walsingham.
Elizabethan Medicine
Elizabethan doctors believed that certain personality traits stemmed from excess bodily fluids
- The Sanguine (air) : most desirable, thought to be enthusiastic, social and active
- The Choleric (fire) : excess of yellow bile, aggressive behaviour
- The Plegmatic (water) excess of phlegm, listless and unenergetic behaviour
- The Melancholic (earth) excess of black bile, depression
The 4 humours
Renaissance
Seen as the rebirth of questioning and curiosity, going back to Classical ideas. Conflicts the Medieval Era.