Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy

Hamlet's tragedy is constructed as a perspective of matter that is destined for decay, and this "objective," or "object-focused," mode of viewing the material world enhances theatrical and theological understandings of the play's props, figurative language, and characte...

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Main Author: Lacy, Rachel
Other Authors: Prince, Kathryn
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32430
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4357
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-324302018-01-05T19:02:22Z Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy Lacy, Rachel Prince, Kathryn Vanitas Memento mori Still life Eucharist Transubstantiation Material culture Materialist philosophy Early modern English theatre Shakespeare Semiotics Phenomenology Emblem Melancholy Hamlet's tragedy is constructed as a perspective of matter that is destined for decay, and this "objective," or "object-focused," mode of viewing the material world enhances theatrical and theological understandings of the play's props, figurative language, and characters. Hamlet's "objective mode" evokes early modern materialist philosophies of vanitas and memento mori, and it is communicated in theatre through semiotic means, whereby material items stand for moral ideas according to an established sign-signified relation. Extending an objective reading to Hamlet's characters reveals their function as images, or two-dimensional emblems, in moments of slowing narrative time. In the graveyard scene (5.1), characters and theatrical props cooperate to materialize the objective perspective. As a prop, Ophelia's corpse complicates the objective mode through its semantic complexity. Thus, she stands apart from other characters as one that both serves to construct and to deconstruct the objective mode. Hamlet's tragic outlook, which depends upon an understanding of matter as destined for decay, and of material items as ends in themselves rather than vehicles for spiritual transformation, is an early modern notion concurrent with theological debates surrounding the Eucharist. Drawing upon art-historical, linguistic, feminist, theological, and theatrical approaches, this thesis contributes to concurrent discourse on Hamlet's tragic genre. 2015-05-29T18:39:18Z 2015-05-29T18:39:18Z 2015 2015 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32430 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4357 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Vanitas
Memento mori
Still life
Eucharist
Transubstantiation
Material culture
Materialist philosophy
Early modern English theatre
Shakespeare
Semiotics
Phenomenology
Emblem
Melancholy
spellingShingle Vanitas
Memento mori
Still life
Eucharist
Transubstantiation
Material culture
Materialist philosophy
Early modern English theatre
Shakespeare
Semiotics
Phenomenology
Emblem
Melancholy
Lacy, Rachel
Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy
description Hamlet's tragedy is constructed as a perspective of matter that is destined for decay, and this "objective," or "object-focused," mode of viewing the material world enhances theatrical and theological understandings of the play's props, figurative language, and characters. Hamlet's "objective mode" evokes early modern materialist philosophies of vanitas and memento mori, and it is communicated in theatre through semiotic means, whereby material items stand for moral ideas according to an established sign-signified relation. Extending an objective reading to Hamlet's characters reveals their function as images, or two-dimensional emblems, in moments of slowing narrative time. In the graveyard scene (5.1), characters and theatrical props cooperate to materialize the objective perspective. As a prop, Ophelia's corpse complicates the objective mode through its semantic complexity. Thus, she stands apart from other characters as one that both serves to construct and to deconstruct the objective mode. Hamlet's tragic outlook, which depends upon an understanding of matter as destined for decay, and of material items as ends in themselves rather than vehicles for spiritual transformation, is an early modern notion concurrent with theological debates surrounding the Eucharist. Drawing upon art-historical, linguistic, feminist, theological, and theatrical approaches, this thesis contributes to concurrent discourse on Hamlet's tragic genre.
author2 Prince, Kathryn
author_facet Prince, Kathryn
Lacy, Rachel
author Lacy, Rachel
author_sort Lacy, Rachel
title Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy
title_short Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy
title_full Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy
title_fullStr Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy
title_full_unstemmed Hamlet's Objective Mode and Early Modern Materialist Philosophy
title_sort hamlet's objective mode and early modern materialist philosophy
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32430
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4357
work_keys_str_mv AT lacyrachel hamletsobjectivemodeandearlymodernmaterialistphilosophy
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