Hamlet is such an obscure, impenetrable and nuanced writing that it has been prey to a runaway interpretative voracity on the part of the critics. This boundless fertility has fostered imagination excessively, most of the times, to the detriment of a unitary study of the play. In fact, criticism in general has made of Hamlet a bunch of unconnected fragments. T. S. Eliot soon perceived the dangers of carrying out this kind of literary analysis
A half century and more has elapsed now since T. S. Eliot declared Hamlet to be "most certainly an a...
T.S. Eliot's "Hamlet and His Problems" (1921) seems to be a pretext to add another erudite concept t...
The article is based on the premise that Hamlet has been functioning throughout ages as a base for ...
Hamlet is such an obscure, impenetrable and nuanced writing that it has been prey to a runaway inter...
"So far from being Shakespeare's masterpiece, the play is most certainly an artistic failure." This ...
Probably more time has been misspent in trying to fit together the pieces of the Hamlet puzzle than ...
If the title of this essay looks vaguely familiar, that is as it should be. It echoes, with delibera...
Review of Margreta de Grazia, 'Hamlet' without Hamlet’ (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007
The current Arden edition of Hamlet offers three fully-edited and modernized texts, based on the 'ba...
Critical interpretations of Hamlet are largely dependent upon the cultural zeitgeist that provides t...
T.S. Eliot’s poem of 1922, “The Waste Land,” lays philosophical and stylistic ground for the Modern ...
In a comprehensive study of Hamlet and its reception, this dissertation offers a concept and interpr...
Questions of gender, ethnicity and sexuality have all been raised by novelists intent on rewriting S...
William Shakespeare is one of the best and most well-known playwrights in the English language. His ...
We see the early modern as an open carry society. Hamlet’s success in the swordplay at the end is us...
A half century and more has elapsed now since T. S. Eliot declared Hamlet to be "most certainly an a...
T.S. Eliot's "Hamlet and His Problems" (1921) seems to be a pretext to add another erudite concept t...
The article is based on the premise that Hamlet has been functioning throughout ages as a base for ...
Hamlet is such an obscure, impenetrable and nuanced writing that it has been prey to a runaway inter...
"So far from being Shakespeare's masterpiece, the play is most certainly an artistic failure." This ...
Probably more time has been misspent in trying to fit together the pieces of the Hamlet puzzle than ...
If the title of this essay looks vaguely familiar, that is as it should be. It echoes, with delibera...
Review of Margreta de Grazia, 'Hamlet' without Hamlet’ (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007
The current Arden edition of Hamlet offers three fully-edited and modernized texts, based on the 'ba...
Critical interpretations of Hamlet are largely dependent upon the cultural zeitgeist that provides t...
T.S. Eliot’s poem of 1922, “The Waste Land,” lays philosophical and stylistic ground for the Modern ...
In a comprehensive study of Hamlet and its reception, this dissertation offers a concept and interpr...
Questions of gender, ethnicity and sexuality have all been raised by novelists intent on rewriting S...
William Shakespeare is one of the best and most well-known playwrights in the English language. His ...
We see the early modern as an open carry society. Hamlet’s success in the swordplay at the end is us...
A half century and more has elapsed now since T. S. Eliot declared Hamlet to be "most certainly an a...
T.S. Eliot's "Hamlet and His Problems" (1921) seems to be a pretext to add another erudite concept t...
The article is based on the premise that Hamlet has been functioning throughout ages as a base for ...