Gertrude Baniszewski Essays

  • Case of Sylvia Likens: Tortured and Abused

    1406 Words  | 3 Pages

    daughters and found them missing. Because of this, he searched the streets for them. Eventually, he found his daughters at the Baniszewski household. After talking to Gertrude, Lester worked out a deal where the girls would stay with her for 20 dollars a week; today, that amount of money would be worth just under 150 dollars. Most ... ... middle of paper ... ...Gertrude should have received life in prison without parole. The three boys who went to prison should have been given a longer sentence;

  • Is Hamlet Sane or Insane...

    1473 Words  | 3 Pages

    giving-out, to note that you know aught of me-this do swear, so grac and mercy at your most need help you.". This quote is supported with Hamlet’s actions; when Hamlet is around he is in around certain characters. When he is around Polonius, Claudius! Gertrude, Ophelia, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern he acts crazy. However when he is around his friends, Horatio, Bernardo, The Players and the Grave Diggers, he acts quite sane. Even King Claudius confesses that Hamlet’s is sane when he says "...His affections

  • The Hamlet Paradigm

    4549 Words  | 10 Pages

    The Hamlet Paradigm Central Question of the Play How does an individual react when he develops an obsession with destroying the powerful force ruling his country, yet risks experiencing psychological estrangement, occurring at multiple levels within himself, if he attempts to destroy that force? This is the central question that Shakespeare explores in his play Hamlet, which is a character study of an individual harboring just such an obsession, entailing just such a risk. Introduction

  • Laertes in the Play and Movie Version of Hamlet

    876 Words  | 2 Pages

    Laertes in the Play and Movie Version of Hamlet In the 1990 version of Hamlet starring Mel Gibson, Laertes is portrayed in a very poor light. He seems to have no redeeming qualities whatsoever. At certain points during the written play, Laertes's actions may be taken entirely differently than they are conveyed in the movie. In the film version of Hamlet, all of Laertes's negative aspects are much more pronounced. As presented in the movie, Laertes is a sore loser. The text version of the play has

  • Ophelia and Hamlet and Gertrude and Claudius

    764 Words  | 2 Pages

    Relationships of Ophelia and Hamlet and Gertrude and Claudius A close look at the relationships between Ophelia and Hamlet and Gertrude and Claudius, will illustrate that betrayal, selfishness and lack of love caused their destruction. There are many examples of betrayal in the play Hamlet. In these examples betrayal leads to the destruction of relationships. Claudius is the king of Denmark and he will do anything to stay that way. His wife Gertrude loves her son Hamlet and Claudius knows

  • Free Hamlet Essays: Father and Son in Hamlet

    609 Words  | 2 Pages

    Father and Son in Hamlet Although they may exhibit some similar traits, all fathers and sons are individuals. They are, or will become, their own man. This development is based on life experience, which is never the same for any two people. In the case of King and Prince Hamlet, this also holds true. King Hamlet must have been a good father for his son to be so devoted and loyal to him. It almost seems that the Prince made an idol of his father. In Prince Hamlet's first soliloquy he described

  • Hamlet Was Not Mad

    801 Words  | 2 Pages

    To Be Sane or Not to Be in Hamlet ‘ “To be or not to be” -- “that is the...” soliloquy. “Whether ‘tis nobler in the mind to...” agree, the question that no one knows. To think, to know, to know perchance to understand, the truth behind it all... ’ Was it, or was it not true that Hamlet was faking his insanity, really suffering, or perhaps even both. First, this is what insanity is; insanity is acting peculiar, but not knowing that they are. Also, it is going through a lot of stresses at the

  • Free Hamlet Essays: Little Control in Hamlet

    804 Words  | 2 Pages

    Little Control in Hamlet Even though Hamlet is a prince, he has little control over the course of his life. In that time many things were decided for the princes and princesses such as their education and even who they married. This was more or less the normal way of life for a child of the monarch. But in the case of Hamlet, any of the control he thought he had, fell away with the murder of his father. Having his father, the king, be killed by his own brother, sent Hamlet into a state of feeling

  • Free Hamlet Essays: Lonely Hamlet

    766 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lonely Hamlet Hamlet’s decision to keep the murder of his father a secret to himself, along with the betrayals of many of his close friends and family, leads to his eventual downfall. If someone was there for him, whether it was his mother Gertrude, his girlfriend Ophelia, or Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, maybe his timeless death could have been prevented. Instead, his mother sides with Claudius who wants to kill him, Ophelia won’t go behind her father, Polonius’, back to be with him and Rosencrantz

  • Foils in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1238 Words  | 3 Pages

    Foils in Hamlet Hamlet by William Shakespeare is a well known play.   Shakespeare uses foils in Hamlet to further create and explain Hamlet’s character. Foils are created in a play to help the audience better understand a major character by giving the character someone to talk to and compare the major character to. [Using the definition as the thesis was not a good idea in this paper. The assignment said not in the first paragraph, i.e., the paper was to be about how foils affect the meaning of

  • Archetypes

    581 Words  | 2 Pages

    4tH Quarter Paper There are many archetypical symbols used in hundreds of works, new and old. Some of these symbols include: war, peace, love, nature, birds, mountains, and darkness. These symbols have deep meaning which help embellish a certain work. They also help the reader to better understand the theme or plot of a work. They are used freely and abundantly in most modern and pre-modern works. The archetypical symbol of war is used symbolically as a sense of conflict or tension. It may express

  • Appearence vs. Reality in William Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1657 Words  | 4 Pages

    Appearance vs. Reality In Shakespeare’s tragedy, Hamlet, there is a dominant and overwhelming theme that is concurrent throughout the play. Throughout the play, all the characters appear as one thing on the outside, yet on the inside they are completely different. The theme of appearance versus reality surrounds Hamlet due to the fact that the characters portray themselves as one person on the outside, and one different on the inside. In the play, Claudius, Hamlet’s uncle, appears to be kind

  • Rewriting Canonical Portrayals of Women

    3362 Words  | 7 Pages

    Rewriting Canonical Portrayals of Women In her collection of short stories, Good Bones (O. W. Toad, 1992), Margaret Atwood (1939 - ) has included Gertrude Talks Back, a piece that rewrites the famous closet scene in Shakespeare´s Hamlet. The character of Hamlet´s mother has posed problems of interpretation to readers, critics and performers, past and present, and has been variously or simultaneosly appraised as a symbol of female wantonness, the object of Hamlet´s Oedipus complex, and an example

  • The Significance of the Players in Hamlet

    909 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Significance of the Players in Hamlet Most characters in Hamlet present themselves as something other than themselves or how as we, the audience, or another character thinks they should appear.  Two of the main characters in this play, Hamlet and King Claudius, are constantly acting as something other than their true nature.    Ironically, the characters that invoke changes in Hamlet and King Claudius to reveal their real personalities are the players, merely actors themselves, not showing

  • Gertrude Simmons Bonnin

    785 Words  | 2 Pages

    Gertrude Simmons Bonnin Even before she spent "four strange summers" of her early teenage years hanging "in the heart of chaos," Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, or Zitkala-Sa, found her Native American world in 1884 at age eight compromised by her mother's tears and the hard, bitter line of her lips.  Zitkala-Sa's mother's hatred of white Americans cast dark shadows over the happy days when Zitkala-Sa was clear in her vision of herself as a young Yankton Nakota girl.  The biological fact that Zitkala-Sa's

  • An Analytical Essay on the Humor in Hamlet

    756 Words  | 2 Pages

    An Analytical Essay on the Humor in Hamlet Humor was added to Hamlet by two major scenes, along with Hamlet's use of his antic-disposition. These two were: the scene between Hamlet and Polonius in the library, and the scene with the grave diggers (the clowns). The scene between Hamlet and Polonius took place in Act II Scene 2. In Hamlet's first encounter with Polonius, he immediately insulted the old man by calling him a "fishmonger". He then quickly changed his opinion and complemented Polonius

  • Comparing Hamlet's Treatment of Ophelia and Gertrude

    1596 Words  | 4 Pages

    Hamlet's Treatment of Ophelia and Gertrude Modern folklore suggests women look at a man's relationship with his mother to predict how they will treat other women in their life.   Hamlet is a good example of a son's treatment of his mother reflecting how he will treat the woman he loves because when considering Hamlet's attitude and treatment of the Ophelia in William Shakespeare's play, Hamlet, one must first consider how Hamlet treated his mother.  A characteristic of Hamlet's personality

  • Disease, Sickness, Death, and Decay in Hamlet

    1527 Words  | 4 Pages

    Death, Sickness, and Decay in Hamlet Decay is defined as "a gradual decline; deterioration," disease as "any departure from health."  Both have many forms: physical, psychological, social, etc.  Multiple examples of illness and deterioration can be found in the tragedy Hamlet.  In this drama, Shakespeare uses imagery of decay and disease and the emotional and moral decay of his characters to enhance the atmosphere of the play. The drama Hamlet abounds with images of decay and disease.  Celestial

  • Psychological Estrangement in Shakespeare’s Hamlet

    1555 Words  | 4 Pages

    Psychological Estrangement in Shakespeare’s "Hamlet" In Shakespeare’s "Hamlet", the main character, Hamlet, is burdened with attaining revenge on his murdered father’s behalf from the king of Denmark, King Claudius. In attempting to kill Claudius, Hamlet risks enduring estrangement occurring within himself at multiple psychological levels. The levels of estrangement that risk Hamlet’s psychological sense of identity are religious estrangement, moral estrangement, estrangement from countrymen,

  • Hamlet's Sanity

    1524 Words  | 4 Pages

    when he asks Horatio and Marcellus not to make any remarks in relation to his ?antic disposition (1.5.192).? Hamlet?s madness allows him to talk to Claudius, Gertrude, Ophelia, and Polonius in a manner unsuitable for a prince. He is often disrespectful and insulting in his remarks. Although his acting backfires during his speech to Gertrude, Hamlet is able to severely criticize her for her actions because she thinks he is insane. During the play he also makes many sexual innuendos and even blatantly