Discourse on Hamlet and Hamlet: A Psychoanalytic InquiryInternational Universities Press, 1971 - 656 pagina's |
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Pagina 108
... feeling , he believes , as subsequent events had since proven . In the player's case , the cause was only a ficti- tious ... feel strong- ly , nevertheless his subsequent actions may give him the lie . Thus all the admiration that Hamlet ...
... feeling , he believes , as subsequent events had since proven . In the player's case , the cause was only a ficti- tious ... feel strong- ly , nevertheless his subsequent actions may give him the lie . Thus all the admiration that Hamlet ...
Pagina 558
... feeling of guilt . A good many reasons can be adduced in order to explain such feel- ings , particularly in Shakespeare , whose works are the most complete catalogue of human cruelty and folly . To be sure , the opposite aspects of ...
... feeling of guilt . A good many reasons can be adduced in order to explain such feel- ings , particularly in Shakespeare , whose works are the most complete catalogue of human cruelty and folly . To be sure , the opposite aspects of ...
Pagina 564
... feeling of guilt and of his desire to abandon magic , even though he had used it for com- mendable purposes . Yet ... feel guilty about it , as Prospero did , and was he therefore ready to put an end to his magic art ? 17 I shall have ...
... feeling of guilt and of his desire to abandon magic , even though he had used it for com- mendable purposes . Yet ... feel guilty about it , as Prospero did , and was he therefore ready to put an end to his magic art ? 17 I shall have ...
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction | 39 |
Discourse on Hamlet | 45 |
Epilogue | 148 |
Copyright | |
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able accepted action actually analysis appearance aroused artistic asserts audience become believe Book of Judges Caliban character Christian Claudius clinical conflict course created creative crime critics death doubt dream effect ego psychology Elizabethan emotions explain external fact fantasy father feel Fortinbras Freud function genius Ghost Goethe hamartia Hamlet Hecuba historical Horatio human incest interpretation killing King Laertes later literary Madariaga madness man's marriage meaning mind Miss Prosser Montaigne mother murder myth never object observed oedipal Oedipus complex Ophelia perhaps person playwright Polonius possible present problem Prof Prospero psychic psychoanalytic psychological question reality reason reference regard relationship repressed revenge Romeo Romeo and Juliet scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays soliloquy speak speare's spectator stage structure superego symbolic Tempest theory tion tragedy true truth unconscious understanding Ur-Hamlet wish words