Marxism Readings of Hamlet Flashcards
1
Q
Marxism based on
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- The economic, political and philosophical writings of Karl Marx
2
Q
Karl Marx
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- A German thinker
- Criticised the political and economic systems of 19th century capitalist societies
3
Q
Marxist politics vs analysis
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- Highly relevant tool for examining the power relations within societies and representations of societies in literature
4
Q
Core Marxist belief
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The belief that the way we think and behave is conditioned by society
- Looks at how far we are controlled by factors such as government, money, and social class
5
Q
Terry Eagleton on Hamlet
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- Hamlet resists playing the roles that his society expects of him
- ‘Unable to find self-definition’
- He is therefore trapped between society’s expectations of him and his own inability to redefine himself, leading to his destruction
6
Q
James Shapiro in ‘1599: A year in the Life of William Shakespeare’
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- Considers the tension in the play as resulting from the conflict between different ‘forces’ of history in the context of an old world of ‘chivalry’
- Fading away and a new society founded on Protestantism and global capitalism beginning to replace it
7
Q
Graham Holderness on Hamlet
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- Dramatising fundamental changes in Elizabethan society
- The ‘medieval world’ of old Hamlet is fading into the past with Denmark no longer being ruled by the values of a ‘medieval warrior-king’
- Claudius, representing a new vision of statesmanship, negotiates peace rather than engaging in battle
8
Q
Graham Holderness on Hamlet being stranded
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- ‘Hamlet is stranded between the two worlds, unable to emulate the heroic values of his father, unable to engage with the modern world of political diplomacy’