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Gertrude And Ophelia Essay

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Throughout history, women have traditionally played a miniscule part in almost all aspects of life. Consequently, this has been reflected Shakespeare’s Hamlet with the existence of only two named female characters— Gertrude, the queen of Denmark and Ophelia, the prince's lover—who are portrayed as delicate and helpless. Gertrude and Ophelia appear to be trivial, submissive heroines who fade into the background of a patriarchal society then die tragically; however, upon further analysis, they are clearly vital to the plot and flow of the play. Gertrude and Ophelia greatly influence the male characters and abet the action in Hamlet.
Shakespeare presents Gertrude and Ophelia as traditional ladies of the Elizabethan Era who are inferior and defined by their relationships with men. Gertrude and Ophelia’s characters are there to be used by and to serve men (Wagner 94). Women were so easy to control because of their dependency on men. Hamlet’s famous insult, “Frailty; thy name is woman,” perfectly captures the sexist attitudes and gender bias in Shakespeare’s time (1.2.150). He claims that frailty and weakness is the hamartia of all women.
As long as Ophelia remains unmarried, she must accept and abide by her father's rules and ultimatums …show more content…

She laments, “He is gone, he is gone, and we cast away moan. God a mercy on his soul (4.5.220-21). She is left to think for herself without any other source of authority and commits suicide. This may be interpreted as proof of her helplessness without a man’s guidance. On the contrary, while Hamlet is still struggling with his decision “to be or not to be,” Ophelia actively chooses not to be. Ophelia took her own life, on her own terms (3.1.64). This makes a major impact in Hamlet. Laertes, who already has wants to kill Hamlet for stabbing his father to death, is driven over the edge by Ophelia's suicide. Her death is the catalyst for the tragic ending of

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