Morgan1234pooki
Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2009
- Messages
- 434
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2011
??
expectations placed on hamlet (theme of revenge)what themes could we talk about that apply to all the different versions of the question?
AHH okay i see . So we should know about 3-4 themes in depth? Because ive just been revising about 8 themes but not in very much detail..Notice that I'm using the same themes to answer these so-called 'theme questions'. All they actually ask is for you to find a link between a certain noun and the main themes of the play (which will never change.)
Yes. What are the 8 themes you've been revising? Some of them might be the same thing or elaborations of a greater theme e.g. You can look at 'suicide' as a theme, but its also part of the greater theme 'mortality'. You can just slip it into the paragraph with the topic sentence on mortality.AHH okay i see . So we should know about 3-4 themes in depth? Because ive just been revising about 8 themes but not in very much detail..
Doing one/two paragraphs on each theme is fine. All you need to do is mention what themes you'll discuss in the intro, then discuss them one by one (always making some clear connection to the question - this can seem difficult but if you think about it for a few moments before you write the essay it shouldn't be too hard, like what I did above for 'expectations' 'ambition' etc.)Any idea on how I can shape my argument? It is about action vs inaction, deception(appearance vs reality) and mortality (death)
sorry I misread your question. When I read 'human experience' I think the play wants you to focus on the characters and how they resemble real human-beings. i.e. Through the characters of Hamlet, Shakespeare's Hamlet reinforces the significance of loyalty (look at what relationships reinforce the significance of loyalty and why)Also, how would you answer the hsc question
"Through its portrayal of human experience, Shakespeare’s Hamlet reinforces the significance of loyalty."
To what extent does your interpretation of Hamlet support this view?
in specific reference to the 'human experience' part of it. I have no idea what to say about the 'human experience' part.
thanks again.
hey i was just wondering if you could explain the difference/similarity/definition of existianlism vs mortality? Because I thought that hamlet put on his facade of madness (false appearances) to allow for his existential philosophizing, because the only point in the play he is true, is his soliloquies, and he just rambles on about suicide in them , and so on.Mortality seems problematic, but the question may be on mortality itself, in which case 'appearance vs reality' would be the least relevanttheme (if you have evidence to say otherwise, please, prove me wrong! It's important to think about the play in different ways)
They probably won't specify textual form, but they might ask you to weave aspects of the textual form into your answer i.e. using dramatic theatre literary techniques (focus on soliloquies to make it a bit easier) and talk about the structure of the play (so focus on delay and resolution to do that easier).I have a hunch it may specify deception or mortality..and perhaps textual form (<-- form will fuck everyone over, no joke)
For textual form, I would think about Hamlet as a revenge tragedy play...I have a hunch it may specify deception or mortality..and perhaps textual form (<-- form will fuck everyone over, no joke)