How Did Hamlet Kill Claudius

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Hamlet, written by William Shakespeare around the end of the sixteenth century, has arguably become one of the most popular plays ever written with thousands of essays ranging from overviews of the play to heated debates over how a single word is meant to be interpreted. One of the more famous critical debates on Hamlet is over why Hamlet delays killing Claudius, the king of Denmark who has murdered Hamlet's father and married Hamlet's mother. Sigmund Freud, famous for his work in the field of psychology, published The Material and Sources of Dreams giving a new reason why Hamlet delays killing Claudius from a psychologist's point of view that has been rebuked by many yet also incorporated into a plethora of performances of Hamlet. Freud’s controversial thesis: Hamlet delays killing Claudius because of an unresolved Oedipus complex.
Merriam Webster defines an Oedipus complex as, “a child's positive [sexual] feelings toward the parent of the opposite sex and hostile or jealous feelings toward the parent of the same sex that develop usually between the ages of three and six and that may be a source of adult personality disorder when unresolved—used especially of the male child.” Perhaps this describes why Hamlet holds such extreme anger towards Claudius, not only did he kill Hamlet Sr., but he also marries Gertrude (the person that Hamlet loves).
Hamlet's relationship with Ophelia proves that Hamlet displays and Oedipus complex. First, his attraction to Ophelia proves …show more content…

Jones writes, “Whereas the murder of his father evokes in him indignation and a plain recognition of his obvious duty to avenge it, his mother’s guilty conduct awakes in him the intensest horror”(2). Hamlet must be more infuriated at news of the affair because it demonstrates to him Gertrude’s attraction to someone other than

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