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متجدد ..IMPORTANT QUESTIONS Hamlet https://forum.art-en.com/viewtopic.php?t=15896 |
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الكاتب: | عبق الرياحين [ الأربعاء مارس 25, 2009 9:23 pm ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..IMPORTANT QUESTIONS Hamlet |
![]() Hamlet Summary Hamlet is the son of the late King Hamlet (of Denmark), who died two months before the start of the play. After King Hamlet's death, his brother, Claudius, becomes king, and marries King Hamlet's widow, Gertrude (Queen of Denmark). Young Hamlet fears that Claudius killed his own brother (Hamlet's father) to become king of Denmark, ![]() ![]() In his anger, Hamlet seems to act like a madman, prompting King Claudius, his wife Gertrude, and his advisor Polonius to send Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to spy on Hamlet and figure out why he is acting mad. Hamlet even treats Polonius' daughter Ophelia rudely, prompting Polonius to believe Hamlet is madly in love with her, though Claudius expects otherwise. Polonius, a man who talks too long- windedly, had allowed his son Laertes to go to France (then sent Reynaldo to spy on Laertes) and had ordered Ophelia not to associate with Hamlet. Claudius, fearing Hamlet may try to kill him, sends Hamlet to England ![]() ![]() ![]() After Hamlet leaves, Laertes returns from France, enraged over Polonius' death. Ophelia reacts to her father's death with utter madness and eventually falls in a stream and drowns, further angering Laertes. En route to England, Hamlet finds the orders and changes them to order Rosencrantz and Guildenstern killed, as does occur, though Hamlet is kidnapped by pirates one day later. The pirates return Hamlet to Claudius (for a ransom), and Claudius tries one last attempt to eliminate Hamlet: he arranges a sword duel between Laertes and Hamlet. The trick, however, is that the tip of Laertes' sword is poisoned. As a backup precaution, Claudius poisons the victory cup in case Hamlet wins. During the fight, the poisoned drink is offered to Hamlet, he declines, and instead his mother, Gertrude, drinks it (to the objection of Claudius). Laertes, losing to Hamlet, illegally scratches him with the poisoned sword to ensure Hamlet's death. Hamlet (unknowingly), then switches swords with Laertes, and cuts and poisons him. The queen dies, screaming that she has been poisoned and Laertes, dying, admits of Claudius' treachery. Weakening, Hamlet fatally stabs Claudius, Laertes dies ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
الكاتب: | Wissam [ الخميس مارس 26, 2009 2:42 am ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..Hamlet |
عبق الرياحين, مشكورة عالملخص الرائع الله يعطيكي ألف عافية ![]() |
الكاتب: | فارس [ الجمعة مارس 27, 2009 2:36 am ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..Hamlet |
عبق الرياحين, بارك الله بك ![]() |
الكاتب: | لجين [ الجمعة مارس 27, 2009 3:07 am ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..Hamlet |
عبق الرياحين,
أشكرك عزيزتي...مسرحية هاملت من أروع مسرحيات شكسبير .. ![]() |
الكاتب: | عبق الرياحين [ الجمعة مارس 27, 2009 4:21 am ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..Hamlet |
Wissamo, لجين, فارس, ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() اذا غدا سوف نقوم بتسميع الدرس ![]() سوف اقوم بنشر بعضimportant Quotations في الدرس القادم ![]() |
الكاتب: | حلواني [ الأحد مارس 29, 2009 9:03 pm ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..Hamlet |
حبذا لو تأتينا بأوثيلو |
الكاتب: | عبق الرياحين [ الاثنين مارس 30, 2009 10:57 am ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..Hamlet |
اقتباس: حبذا لو تأتينا بأوثيلو
![]() حلواني .....للاسف لا اعرف ما هي .... ![]() على ما اعتقد انها مسرحية لشكسبير لا ادري؟؟؟؟؟؟ ![]() ![]() ![]() لكن لماذا تريد تلخيصها فالمقرر لهذه السنة ![]() As you like it ![]() Hamlet ![]() اما اذا كنت تريدها ثقافة عامة فلنا حديث اخررر ![]() ................... اسفة عن التاخر لوضع الاسئلة ..... ![]() |
الكاتب: | عبق الرياحين [ الأحد إبريل 05, 2009 2:17 am ] |
عنوان المشاركة: | متجدد ..IMPORTANT QUESTIONS Hamlet |
IMPORTANT QUESTIONS Does Hamlet Hesitate? The nonsense about Hamlet being "unable to make up his mind" begins with his own speeches after hearing the Player King's speech on Hecuba (he berates himself for hesitating), and especially after talking to Fortinbras's soldier ("thinking too precisely on the event" -- i.e., people who obsess a lot are the ones who do the least). Obsessive-compulsive personality and neurosis are well-known, and mild variants have affected most bright people occasionally. Bradley points out that Hamlet seems depressed ("melancholy") and that this will slow a person down; early 20th century writers influenced by psychoanalysis talked about a mother-fixation causing the depression. But the truth is that Hamlet has no opportunity to kill the king and then justify his action, until the final disaster, when Laertes reveals "The king's to blame". In the case, "providence" provides the opportunity. Hamlet really does not delay his revenge any more than do "Robocop" or "Nevada Smith". Heroes of earlier revenge plays soliloquize about having to delay, and criticize themselves for it. But revenge plays require that the revenge take time and planning -- or there would be no play. Sam Coleridge (an obsessive who blamed the failure of his grandiose projects on his opium habit) talked about Hamlet thinking too hard. Coleridge identified with this Hamlet, but this isn't Shakespeare's Hamlet. Schlegel called Hamlet "thought-sick". Goethe found Hamlet "lovely", "sensitive" and "without strength of nerve". Now, when Hamlet expresses regrets that he's not completed his revenge, he compares himself unfavorably to the Player King (who has just recited a ridiculous, bombastic speech) and to Fortinbras (who is getting thousands of people killed for no good reason at all -- I first became interested in Shakespeare during the Vietnam war). It is no coincidence that both the Player King and Fortinbras are pursuing stupid, vain goals. What is Shakespeare trying to tell us? Hamlet's "revenge" isn't so much simply the killing of the king, as it is the purging of all the rottenness in the Danish court. And although it costs him his life, he succeeds. At some time, we all consider how much wrong there is in the world. "Hamlet" gives us a chance to watch an ordinary person consciously choose to say "No!" to the world's wrongness and phoniness, and to strike back with intelligence and power. ![]() ![]() I hear Hamlet saying, "So many people put so much effort into doing things that are not worthwhile. It's a bad world, and I am far from a perfect human being. And we all end up dead in the end. But I am going to do something worthwhile, and do it ![]() Think about it. ![]() More on whether Hamlet has a "tragic flaw." I believe that the whole "there has to be a tragic flaw" business was dreamed up by Aristotle, who got paid to tell young people that if they were really good, then bad things couldn't happen to them, and that people went to sad shows just to have a good cry ("purge the emotions of pity and fear"). If it is helpful, point out the obvious. Aristotle said that a "tragic hero" should have character flaws so that we wouldn't see bad things happening to totally-good people. Maybe the heroes of Shakespeare's tragedies are not all-virtuous because Shakespeare wants to show us life as it really is. ![]() |
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