Impulsive Behavior In Hamlet

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(insert hook and introduction) William Shakespeare 's Hamlet is significantly different from other Elizabethan era revenge plays, in the sense that the play illustrates the psychological distress of the tragic hero. begin with the noblest motivations (to punish his father’s murderer) but by the end, his situation is do dire that the only plausible final act should be his death. Hamlet Prince of Denmark, is visited by the ghost of his father and told that his uncle Claudius, who is now King and married to his mother, was responsible for his murder. Hamlet is first apprehensive about avenging his father 's death but, then he decides to fulfil the duty by pretending to be insane. He hires actors to do a play about a man who kills his brother to …show more content…

Looking into this can determine future behavioral issues. The obvious impulsive reactions of Hamlet are manipulated in order to understand the unconscious desires and actions. The mind is divided into three components: the Id, Ego and Superego. He compared the conscious and subconscious to an iceberg. This iceberg has both the Superego and Id engulfed in water. The Id is present at birth and is entirely part of the unconscious mind, it is driven by the pleasure principle. For example the desire to be cleaned and fed. The superego is the moral principle that decides the right decision. This iceberg represents how these two are unconscious and do not directly come to the surface. In the middle of the iceberg is the Ego the preconscious, this is the area that one is comfortable with showing the world. The ego is responsible for dealing with the reality principle, which works to satisfy the Ids impulses and desires in a more realistic way. The Id is the most prevalent driving factor in Hamlet. At the beginning of the play Hamlet 's Id wats him to kill himself, as he states "O, that this too too solid flesh would melt, thaw, and resolve itself into a dew." As the Id pushes him to commit suicide, it then decides killing others would give greater satisfaction. It is also prevalent in the English literatures most famous soliloquy "to be or not to be.." Hamlet struggles with ending all his pain through suicide or pushing through it. As previously stated the Id judges the situation and finds the ideal that will satisfy/pleasure the being. In this case the satisfying choice is urging to him to kill himself and kill those who have done him

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