Shakespeare’s Ophelia Hamlet Essays

  • Shakespeare's Hamlet - The Character of Ophelia

    3349 Words  | 7 Pages

    Hamlet: The Character of Ophelia Concerning the Ophelia of Shakespeare’s tragic drama Hamlet, is she an innocent type or not? Is she a victim or not? This essay will explore these and other questions related to this character. Rebecca West in “A Court and World Infected by the Disease of Corruption” viciously, and perhaps unfoundedly, attacks the virginity of Ophelia: There is no more bizarre aspect of the misreading of Hamlet’s character than the assumption that his relations

  • The Love Of Hamlet For Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1527 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Love Of Hamlet For Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet Hamlet is without any reservations, one of Shakespeare's most mystifying plays. Although the play has a concise story, it is filled with many uncertainties relating to different issues behind the plot. The reader is left with many uncertainties about the true feelings of prince Hamlet. One question in particular is, did Hamlet really love Ophelia? This dispute can be reinforced either way, however I believe Hamlet was truly in love with

  • Ophelia In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

    569 Words  | 2 Pages

    Many lessons can be taken from Ophelia's fall in William Shakespeare's play, Hamlet. Watching Ophelia go from a perfectly sane character to an absolutely insane, tragic one forces you to make realizations about life that affect the way that you live. Ophelia's transformation taught me couple of lessons. First it taught me that I should not become too attached to something, or put all of my eggs into one basket. Secondly Ophelia's transformation taught me that others people's remarks should be taken

  • Comparing Hamlet And Ophelia In Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1531 Words  | 4 Pages

    After the deaths of their respective fathers, both Hamlet and Ophelia from Shakespeare’s Hamlet are virtually consumed with grief. Hamlet was engulfed in thoughts of vengeance, while Ophelia’s sense of mental wellbeing dissipated. Though the circumstances around the deaths of their fathers were relatively similar, the contrasting manners in which they handled their grief imply a distinctive difference between Hamlet and Ophelia’s personalities and reveal their departure from traditional gender customs

  • The Character of Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1178 Words  | 3 Pages

    Character of Ophelia in Hamlet In Shakespeare's play, Hamlet, the character Ophelia plays an important role in the elaboration of the plot.  In the beginning, she is in a healthy state of mind, in love with Hamlet, yet controlled by her father.  During the play she has several troubling experiences involving Hamlet - causing her to become distressed.  The death of Ophelia's father leaves her mentally unstable and in a state of madness that eventually leads to her own death. Ophelia and Hamlet's

  • Analysis Of Ophelia In Shakespeare's 'Hamlet'

    737 Words  | 2 Pages

    Throughout Shakespeare’s play Hamlet, Ophelia is repeatedly used like an object. She never tries to defend herself, just stands there and takes what is thrown at her. Ophelia’s obedience has morphed her into a toy, used by her own father, Hamlet, and even nature itself. After being verbally abused by the man she loves, there is no sympathy from her own father. Polonius just tells his daughter he and the King heard it all, that she should not worry about explaining: "—How now, Ophelia? You need not

  • Ophelia as a Foil to Shakespeare's Hamlet

    870 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ophelia as a Foil to Hamlet In Shakespeare's tragedy, Hamlet, the audience finds a docile, manipulated, scolded, victimized young lady named Ophelia. Ophelia is a foil to Hamlet. Plays have foils to help the audience better understand the more important characters in the play.  The character of Ophelia is necessary so that the audience will give Hamlet a chance to get over his madness and follow his heart. Similarities are an important part of being a foil. One similarity that Hamlet

  • The Character of Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    3001 Words  | 7 Pages

    Gunnar Boklund in “Hamlet” performs a partial-analysis on the character of Ophelia in Shakespeare’s tragedy, Hamlet: The only character who is presented almost entirely as a victim is Ophelia, a victim of the King’s fear and curiosity, her father’s servility and fundamental indifference to her, Hamlet’s misunderstanding of the situation and brutal treatment of her, and finally his fatal thrust through the arras in the closet scene. Her madness is, as I see it, a purely pathetic element in the

  • Shakespeare's Hamlet Compared To Ophelia

    1260 Words  | 3 Pages

    The mechanical regularities of such emotional maladies as they are presented within Hamlet, not only allow his audience to sympathize with the tragic prince Hamlet, but to provide the very complexities necessary in understanding the tragedy of his, ironically similar, lady Ophelia as well. It is the poor Ophelia who suffers at her lover's discretion because of decisions she was obligated to make. Hamlet provides his own self-torture and does fall victim to depression and grief, however,

  • Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1166 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ophelia is one of the main characters in the play, Hamlet, as the daughter of the chief counsellor of the king, Polonius, the sister of Laertes and the romantic interest of Hamlet. Ophelia is one of the very few female characters in the play and Ophelia and Queen Gertrude are both used to be contrasted. Ophelia is a loyal character, which the opposite of Queen Gertrude because Gertrude betrayed her husband, King Hamlet, by poisoning him and marrying his brother, now King Claudius. She is a loyal

  • Sane Hamlet and Mad Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1496 Words  | 3 Pages

    Sane Hamlet and Mad Ophelia In Hamlet, Shakespeare incorporates a theme of madness with two characters: one truly mad, and one only acting mad to serve a motive. The madness of Hamlet is frequently disputed. This paper argues that the contrapuntal character in the play, namely Ophelia, acts as a balancing argument to the other character's madness or sanity.  Shakespeare creates a contrasting relationship between the breakdown of Ophelia and the "north-north-west" brand of insanity used by Hamlet

  • The Tragedy of Lady Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1356 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Tragedy of Lady Ophelia of Hamlet Melancholy, grief, and madness pervade Shakespeare's great tragedy, Hamlet.  The emotional maladies presented within Hamlet, not only allow the audience to sympathize with prince Hamlet, but also with the tragic lady Ophelia as well.  It is Ophelia who suffers at her lover's discretion because of decisions she was obligated to make on behalf of her weak societal position. Hamlet provides his own self-torture and does fall victim to melancholia and grief

  • The Intention Of Ophelia In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1158 Words  | 3 Pages

    Throughout the timeline of William Shakespeare's Hamlet, the relationship that strikes the reader first, is that of Prince Hamlet and a girl named Ophelia, their relationship can simply be described as strained due to interference of Ophelia's family that eventually led their relationship to its weakest and most deadly point. From the start of Hamlet to the end of the story, the reader is left confused, and curious as to wether or not Hamlet’s love for Ophelia is genuine. Even in the first glimpses

  • Hamlet - Shakespeare's Ophelia as Modern Icon

    3387 Words  | 7 Pages

    Hamlet - Shakespeare's Ophelia as Modern Icon Shakespeare's Ophelia is not lacking in attention. As one of Shakespeare's most popular female characters she has enjoyed many appellations from the bard. '"Fair Ophelia." "Most beautified Ophelia." "Pretty Ophelia." "Sweet Ophelia." "Dear Ophelia." "Beautiful Ophelia…sweet maid…poor wretch." "Poor Ophelia."' (Vest 1) All of these names for Ophelia can be found in Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. Since Shakespeare's incarnation

  • The Manipulation And Loss Of Ophelia In Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1914 Words  | 4 Pages

    In Shakespeare's Hamlet, Prince Hamlet may act like he is "mad north-northwest", but it is his lover, Ophelia, who is truly mad.  Both lose their fathers at the hands of others and both have loved ones that seem to have turned against them.  Unlike Hamlet, who has revenge, Ophelia ends up having nothing to hold onto.  Her sanity breaks and sends her into a downward spiral, while Hamlet's remains intact.  In this paper, I will show that it is the manipulation by and loss of the two men Ophelia loved

  • The Role of Ophelia in William Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1327 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Role of Ophelia in William Shakespeare's Hamlet Although Ophelia is not a main character in the revenge tragedy 'Hamlet' her dramatic purpose is vital to the play. It emphasizes the poisoned body politic and its affects on the innocent. The role of women in the sixteenth century is to be obedient and dutiful, the only way to accomplish this was to be passive. Women in the sixteenth century were meant to be obedient to their fathers, for they were their property until such a time

  • Characters In Shakespeare's Hamlet, Ophelia, And Claudius

    1297 Words  | 3 Pages

    presented in one of his plays Hamlet where William Shakespeare uses the characters: Hamlet, Ophelia, and Claudius to show how they become the victim of their own flaws. Hamlet becomes a victim to his own inability to take actions against King Claudius.While, Ophelia becomes a victim of her emotions and dependency on other characters and King Claudius becomes a victim of his greed to achieve more power. In William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the character flaws of Hamlet, Ophelia and Claudius lead to their

  • Ophelia as a Sexual Woman in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1215 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ophelia as a Sexual Woman in Shakespeare's Hamlet In Shakespeare's tragedy, Hamlet, it is possible for the audience or reader to come to view Ophelia as an innocent victim trapped in the most tragic circumstances. She was an obedient and loving daughter to her father Polonius. Ophelia obeyed him, when he ordered her to stop seeing Hamlet, her love, and even when she was asked to betray her love, acting as a decoy to allow the King and Polonius to discover the source of Hamlet's grief. Her

  • The Morality Of Ophelia In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1927 Words  | 4 Pages

    Ophelia has limited opportunities as a woman in a patriarchal society and this is what separates her from Hamlet, who has the freedom to change his own fate. Ophelia needs to be obedient and is not allowed to express herself and her true feelings. What happens in her life is determined by the whims of the men who control her. She is obedient to her father and brother and also to the king, and although she tries to do what is right, she is often pulled along by these men. Unlike Hamlet, who can act

  • The Character of Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    939 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Character of Ophelia in Hamlet Of all the pivotal characters in Hamlet, Ophelia is the most static and one-dimensional. She has the potential to become a tragic heroine; to overcome the adversities inflicted upon her, but she instead crumbles into insanity, becoming merely tragic. This is because Ophelia herself is not as important as her representation of the duel nature of women in the play. Ophelia serves a distinct purpose: to show at once Hamlet's warped view of women as callous sexual