Name:
Sonal Baraiya.
Roll
No: 34.
Subject:
P.1 – The Renaissance Literature.
Topic:
Formalistic Approach of "Hamlet".
What
is Formalism?
Formalism is a
school of literary criticism and literary theory having mainly to do with
structural purposes of a particular text. It is the study of a text without
taking into account any outside influence. Formalism rejects notions of culture
or societal influence, authorship, and content, and instead focuses on modes,
genres, discourses, and forms.
In Hamlet we seemed
various approaches but we focuses only on formalistic approach –
The
Trap Metaphor in Hamlet such as:
1. The Trap Imagery.
2. The cosmological Trap.
3. ‘‘Seeming’’ and ‘‘Being.’’
4. ‘‘Seeing’’ and
‘‘Knowing.’’
The formalist perspective is one of
the best perspectives to use in the play Hamlet, prince of Denmark. It helps a
person find the hidden meaning throughout the play in multiple ways, which
allow a person to truly understand the play completely such way is like when
Ophelia goes crazy after her father is murdered and Hamlet is sent away. She
sings songs to the Queen and king of Denmark that at first glance are just
songs. When looked at between the lines; however, the two songs she sings are
of her father and Hamlet. The song about Hamlet talks not only about Hamlet but
of her secret pregnancy with Hamlet’s child. This is also mentioned before
Ophelia goes crazy and polonius, Ophelia’s father is still alive, and Hamlet is
just beginning to act crazy. Hamlet mentions
something to polonius about not letting his daughter out because she
might be or get pregnant. Such lines and places in the play like this at first
seem to be nothing at all. However, if looked at between the lines then another
completely different meaning is sent across. The formalist perspective allows
people to view the play in this way getting hidden meaning in it while figuring
out the plot.
In Hamlet there are many different types of
formalist perspectives but while reading think Shakespeare really focuses on
tone in Hamlet. Hamlet states ‘‘he is going to come at him mom with words like
daggers’’ and in doing that Hamlet is changing his tone from upset and
disappointed to harming and hurtful while talking to his mother. During this
scene Hamlet uses great word choice saying how disgusted his is with his mother
and uncle for the acts of wrong that they have done. Hamlet is easily able to
slip in and out of his role as being known as a crazy man which also adds to
Shakespeare’s great use of perspectives.
The formalist perspective truly
gives insight in the true actions occurring in ‘‘Hamlet’’ by William
Shakespeare. By Hamlet’s word choice in the first conversation with the king in
act – 1 we can clearly see the distain that is already beginning to brew
because of his uncle talking power and even more, taking Hamlet’s mother to be
his wife.
‘‘A Little
more than kin, and less than kind.’’
In
this statement you can see the words shows the deeper meaning of the saying
when Hamlet’s says this it is showing us as reader/ listeners that Hamlet
really he is not really pleased that they are even family. To him it was bad
enough that Claudius was his uncle now when Claudius says,
‘‘But, now my cousin Hamlet, and my son.’’
It
is too much for Hamlet to take and through the formalist we are able to grasp
that Hamlet distains this and wishes that he could remove himself from the
situation that he has been placed in.
Through the formalist perspective
you can see deeper meaning in ordinary lines, such as this seemingly normal
replay in act two; scene two, when he says,
‘‘Not so, my loard; I am too much in the sun.’’
At
first glance all we see is a slanted comment in self-defense but if you read
the words closer in a formalist perspective. You are able to see the message
Shakespeare, was trying to convey. This is, that Hamlet understands at least
portions of what has happened while the rest of the castle is in the clouds on
what has really happened and what Claudius is doing. As you can see the
formalist perspective can really help you understanding grow and give you the
tools to unlock the mysteries of Shakespeare. Here are some types of formalist
perspective:
1. The Trap Imagery:
‘‘My stronger
guilt defeats my strong intent; and like a man to double business bound, I
stand in pause where I shall first being, and both neglect.’’
The words
are not those of Hamlet. They are spoken by Claudius, as he tries to pray for
forgiveness, even as he knows that he cannot give up those things for which he
murdered his brother – his crown, his fulfilled ambition, and his wife. But the
words may easily have been Hamlet’s, for he too is by ‘‘double business
bound’’. Indeed, much of the play centers on doubleness. In that doubleness
lies the essence of what we mean by ‘‘dialectic’’ here – a confrontation of
polarities. A consequence of that doubleness for many of the characters is that
they are apparently caught in a trap a key metaphor in the play – or, in
another image,
‘‘Hoist with
own petard.’’
Let us examine
that metaphor of the trap, for it leads clearly to our seeing how dialectic
provides form in Hamlet. Several time in the play, but in varying images, we
find allusions to different kinds of entanglement. Polonius injudiciously uses
the metaphor to warn Ophelia away from Hamlet’s
‘‘holy vows of heaven,’’
vows that he
says are
‘‘springs to catch
woodcocks.’’
More
significant is Hamlet’s deliberate misnaming of ‘The Murder of Gonzago’; he
calls it ‘‘The Mousetrap’’ because it is, as he says elsewhere, ‘‘the thing
wherein I’ll catch the conscience of the king.’’ Claudius feels that he is
trapped and speak that ‘‘O limmed soul, that, struggling to be free, / Art more engaged Hamlet, in the hands of plotters, finds himself ‘‘thus be – netted
round with villainies’’ and one for whom Claudius has thrown out his angle for
my proper life. The dying Laertes echoes his father’s metaphor when he tells
Osric that he is as a wood to mine own springe. Here we have a pattern of trap images
– springs, lime, nets, mousetraps, and angles or hooks Now traps are usually
for animals, but we are dealing with human beings, people who are trapped in
their own dilemmas, in their own questions, in the very questioning of the
universe.
2. The Cosmological Trap:
The
first scene of act -1 to realize that it is a disturbed world, that a sense of
mystery and deep anxiety preoccupies the soldiers of the watch. The ghost has
appeared already and is expected to appear again. The guards instinctively
assume that the apparition of the former king has more than passing import;
and, in their troubled questions to Horatio about the mysterious preparations
for war, the guards show how closely they regard the connection between the
unnatural appearance of the dead king and the welfare of the state. The guards
have no answers for the mystery, their uncertainty, or their premonitions;
their quandary is mirrored in abundant questions and minimal answers – a
rhetorical phenomenon that recurs throughout the play, even in the soliloquies
of Hamlet; in other words an instance of dialectic. The sense of cosmic
implication in the special situation of Denmark emerges strongly in the
exchange between Hamlet and his friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Much
earlier, before his encounter with the ghost, Hamlet expressed his, extreme
pessimism at man’s having to endure earthly existence with in nature’s unwholesome
realm.
‘‘How weary, stale, flat and
unprofitable seem to me all the uses of this world! fie on’t, ah, fie, ‘tis an
unweeded garden that grows to seed. Things rank and gross in nature possess it
merely.’’
As he speaks these lines Hamlet apparently
has no idea of the truth of his father’s death but is dismayed over his
mother’s hasty marriage to the new king. He has discovered a seeming paradox in
the nature of existence; the fair, in nature and humanity, inevitably submits
to the dominion of the foul. His obsession with the paradox focuses his
attention on Denmark as the model nature and human frailty. Thus a pattern of
increasing parallels between Denmark and the cosmos and between man and nature
develops. Question and answer dialogue and soliloquy, become a verbal unity of
repeated words and phrases, looking forward to larger thematic assertion and
backward to earlier adumbration.
The play constitutes a vast poem in which
speculation about nature, human nature, the health of the state, and human
destiny intensifies into a passionate dialectic. Mystery, riddle, enigma, and
metaphysical question complicate the dialogue. Particularly in his Hamlet
confronts questions that have obsessed protagonists from Sophocles’ Oedipus to
Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. What begins with the relatively
simple questions of the soldiers of the watch in act – 1 is magnified and
complicated as the play moves on. Increasingly tenuous and rarefied probes of
the maddening gulf between reality and appearance proliferate. Moreover, the
contrast between what the simple man cheerfully accepts at face value and what
the thoughtful man is driven to question calls into doubt every surface of
utterance, act, or thing. In the world of Hamlet the cosmic implications of
myriad distinctions between ‘‘seem’’ and ‘‘be’’ confront us at every hand.
3. ‘‘Seeing’’ and
‘‘knowing’’:
The
design of the play can be perceived in part in the elaborate play upon the
words ‘‘see’’ and ‘‘know’’ and their cognates. Whereas the deity can be understood as ‘‘Looking before and
after,’’ the player king points out to his queen that there is a hiatus between
what people intend and what they do: ‘‘Our thoughts are ours, their ends none
of our own.’’ Forced by Hamlet to
consider the difference between her two husbands, Gertrude cries out in
anguish against having to see into her
own motivations:
‘‘O Hamlet, speak no more. Thou turn'st mine eyes into my very soul, and
there I see such black and grained spots as will not leave their tinct.’’
But she does not see the ghost of her former
husband, nor can she see the metaphysical implications of Hamlet’s reason in
madness. The blind eye sockets of Yorick’s skull once saw their quota of
experience, but most people in Denmark are quite content with the surface
appearances of life and refuse even to consider the ends to which mortality
brings everyone. The intricate weaving's of images of sight thus become a kind
of tragic algebra for the plight of a man who seemed to find his way without
his eyes’’ and who found himself at last ‘‘yet unknowing world.’’ The contest
between human aspiration and natural order in which Hamlet finds himself is all
too unequal: idealism turns out to be a poor match for the prison wall of
either Denmark or the grave.
Your Assignment on the Formalistic Approach in ' Hamlet' in which u cosmological trap and Trap imagery. and u also mention about what is formalism . so u r topic is clear through u r assignment work .
ReplyDeleteVery much to provided to what is a formalistic approach and where use to the play of Hamlet on formalistic approach....very nice work!!!
ReplyDeleteThis is largely plagiarized from Guerin, et al., A Handbook of Critical Approaches to Literature, ch 3.
ReplyDelete