Three things:
1. I would have no problem with Hamlet being homosexual
2. This is not MY reading of the text, but one that i've heard of. I'm simply looking a evidence for it
3. I am not gay, so what I say IS uninformed, however I'm going to try to avoid making assumptions and generalisations.
Now, I'm taking a New Historicist/ Psychoanalytical reading, and typed these notes:
[FONT="]o [/FONT]Hamlet is devoted to his father’s ghost, but perhaps it stems more from guilt for not being like his father, and being able to act. Thus, his depression causes guilt, which increases his melancholy and makes it harder for him to act.
§ When Hamlet compares his father to Claudius, he inadvertently compares himself to his father, and the ultra-masculine image of Hercules:
· “ No more like my father than I to Hercules” (1.2.152-3)
§ Shakespeare has created Hamlet’s mirror image in the form of young Fortinbras, who, when placed in similar circumstances to Hamlet, rises to them and fights.
· Hamlet would experience some level of indecision, between his Father’s philosophy and the humanist philosophy.
As I typed the part about his guilt, I wondered if someone COULD take evidence like this, and run with the theory that Hamlet is gay (perhaps with Horatio? Additional evidence would be R&Gs snickering at "Man delights not me") and is feeling guilt for his sexuality, especially in comparison to his father.
Thoughts? I'm quite curious now. (although perhaps not in the same way as Hamlet MAY be )
1. I would have no problem with Hamlet being homosexual
2. This is not MY reading of the text, but one that i've heard of. I'm simply looking a evidence for it
3. I am not gay, so what I say IS uninformed, however I'm going to try to avoid making assumptions and generalisations.
Now, I'm taking a New Historicist/ Psychoanalytical reading, and typed these notes:
[FONT="]o [/FONT]Hamlet is devoted to his father’s ghost, but perhaps it stems more from guilt for not being like his father, and being able to act. Thus, his depression causes guilt, which increases his melancholy and makes it harder for him to act.
§ When Hamlet compares his father to Claudius, he inadvertently compares himself to his father, and the ultra-masculine image of Hercules:
· “ No more like my father than I to Hercules” (1.2.152-3)
§ Shakespeare has created Hamlet’s mirror image in the form of young Fortinbras, who, when placed in similar circumstances to Hamlet, rises to them and fights.
· Hamlet would experience some level of indecision, between his Father’s philosophy and the humanist philosophy.
As I typed the part about his guilt, I wondered if someone COULD take evidence like this, and run with the theory that Hamlet is gay (perhaps with Horatio? Additional evidence would be R&Gs snickering at "Man delights not me") and is feeling guilt for his sexuality, especially in comparison to his father.
Thoughts? I'm quite curious now. (although perhaps not in the same way as Hamlet MAY be )