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SHAKSPER 1999: Re: Pyrrhus Speech
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@ws.bowiestate.edu) Date: 12/16/99
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 10.2228 Thursday, 16 December 1999. From: Nicolas Pullin <NPULLIN@wpo.it.luc.edu> Date: Wednesday, 15 Dec 1999 11:06:31 -0600 Subject: DC - Hamlet, Shakespeare's R&J -Reply Comment: SHK 10.2206 DC - Hamlet, Shakespeare's R&J -Reply Re: Hamlet's request for the Pyrrhus speech, which I am sure will generate numerous responses. Pyrrhus is also a revenger who successfully kills a father figure. Ironically, Pyrrhus' pause with sword aloft foreshadows Hamlet in the prayer scene. The speech also comes from an early form of tragic drama where characters narrate actions rather than perform them; yet the moral questions of revenge are simplified or, indeed, do not apply. For fascinating psychoanalytic discussions of these echoes and Shakespeare's use of them, read Lupton & Reinhard's "After Oedipus" and Kerrigan's recent tome on Revenge Tragedy.
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