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Hegel's Relationship to Shakespeare's Hamlet and Macbeth

Hegel's Relationship to Shakespeare's Hamlet and Macbeth Philosophy

Hegel's Relationship to Shakespeare's Hamlet and Macbeth

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Description
This book explores how Hegel, who had studied Shakespeare first as a schoolboy and then continued to cite him throughout his academic career, responded to the challenges of extracting deep philosophical significance and previously unnoticed implications from this playwright's tragedies, especially Hamlet, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet and King Lear. More specifically, it addresses how Hegel interprets the contrast between the character Hamlet, as the first truly modern individual, with Macbeth, who was rooted in a superstitious mindset regarding witches' prophecies of his fate and the supernatural more generally. This contrast, Hegel argues, illustrates the transition from the ideological characteristic of a feudal social order to an early modern one, while illustrating the inner tensions and contradictions of the latter's extreme individualism with which we continue to grapple in today's world.
Hegel's Relationship to Shakespeare's Hamlet and Macbeth shows how Hegel employed Shakespeare’s imaginary to delve into ideas of self-awareness, freedom, individuality and the recognition of human mortality and finitude. The book is essential reading for all scholars, researchers and advanced students of the thought of G.W.F. Hegel. It is also of interest to scholars of the work of William Shakespeare, especially those focussing on the tragedies.
Product details
Number of Pages:
452
Release Date:
2026-01-11
Publication Date:
2026-01-03
Publisher:
Springer
Languages:
Original: English
ISBN10:
3032094453
ISBN13:
9783032094452
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
691 g
Height:
153 cm
Width:
216 cm
Thickness:
29 cm
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