Misogynistic Perception Of Ophelia In Shakespeare's Hamlet

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Ophelia is a beautiful young woman, easily influenced by the opinions and desires of those superior to her. This simple-mindedness is revealed through her relationships with the men in her life. Ophelia is most molded by her father and brother, Polonius and Laertes, who love her with their own faults. On the other hand, Hamlet manipulates his way into Ophelia’s heart and mind through professions of love. However, Hamlet is a womanizer and believes all women to be the same. This misogynistic perception is reflected in Ophelia and Gertrude’s striking similarities as the only two women in the play. Her lack of self without the dominating figures pulling her in opposite directions leads to her ultimate destruction.
Ophelia’s relationship with …show more content…

Excellent well; you are a fishmonger (2.2).
Where Gertrude had betrayed his father because of Claudius, Ophelia broke Hamlet’s heart because of her father. He sentences Ophelia “to a nunnery” (3.1), where no man can bring a woman to infidelity or prostitution. Although Hamlet loved Ophelia, he is unable to think of her as more than a sexual object after she chooses Polonius over him. Furthermore, Ophelia is unable to think for herself and see past Hamlet’s mad behavior before it is too late. Ophelia’s insanity is a jumble of hate and love for her father and Hamlet, the product of frailty and naivety. The series of traumatic events that lead to her emotional pain being too much for her to handle culminate at the point of her father’s death at the hands of Hamlet. Her frenzied songs best illustrate the ordeals behind her madness. Her first song is directed at Gertrude on two counts. On the surface it laments over Polonius’s indecent burial, but also indicts Gertrude for not properly mourning her husband before remarrying. She makes a remark about the “baker’s daughter” in reference to the way she had to act for her father’s sake, else she be turned into an “owl” (4.5). In her second song, she sings conflictingly about her longing for Hamlet opposed to the abandonment she feels after being treated like a whore when “Before you tumbled me, you promis’d me to wed”

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