1、完整版新历史主义解读哈姆雷特毕业设计毕 业 论 文学生姓名学 号院 (系)外国语学院专 业英语(师范)题 目新历史主义解读哈姆雷特New Historicist Reading of HamletA Thesis Submittedto School of Foreign LanguagesHuaiyin Normal Universityin Partial Fulfillment of the Requirementsfor the Degree of Bachelor of ArtsByLiu LuSupervisor:Xu XiaobingMay 10, 2013Acknowledge
2、mentsI want to express my appreciation to many who supported my efforts in writing this dissertation during past few months.I am greatly indebted to Prof. Ms. Xu who patiently helped me and gave me a lot of useful information. It took her a large amount of time to read and improve my paper. Without
3、her help, I would have failed to finish my paper. I am deeply impressed by her hardworking spirit. Hearty thanks should also be given to Professor Zhang Xiuguo, who has offered the course Essay Writing that tell us how to write a well-formed thesis.Special thanks should be extended my classmates who
4、 show their kind encouragement and useful suggestions to me during my writing process.AbstractHamlet is regarded as the peak of Shakespeares artistic creation. From then on, the play has been studied by a large number of literary scholars, many of whom hold various opinions about the text, so-called
5、 “there are one thousand Hamlets in one thousand readers minds”. The objective of this thesis is to disclose the relationship between Hamlet and its historical context by applying the major theories of New Historicism, especially the New Historicist dictum of “historicity of text and textuality of h
6、istory”. Based on New Historicism, the thesis examines the text from three aspects: firstly, Shakespeares creational background of Hamlet; secondly, the influence of the historical context on Hamlet which makes the play a representation of the Elizabethan era and the specific effect of Hamlet on the
7、 construction of the historical context of the Elizabethan era. Last,the important role playing in the development of drama and culture. Thus,the new historicist reading of Hamlet will highlight some cultural aspects of the text. Keywords: Hamlet; Shakespeare; New Historicism;historicity;textuality
8、摘要哈姆雷特是莎士比亚艺术创作的巅峰之作。时至今日,莎翁评论家依然对该剧众说纷纭,真所谓“有一千个读者就有一千个哈姆雷特”。本文运用“文本的历史性和历史的文本性”这一新历史主义最重要的理论,挖掘哈姆雷特与它所产生的社会历史环境间的“对话性”关系。本文从三个层面解析文本:首先探讨莎士比亚创作哈姆雷特的历史背景;其次哈姆雷特反映了伊丽莎白时代的特定历史背景,揭示历史对文本的影响;最终指出哈姆雷特在英国戏剧和文化发展中所起的重大历史作用。因此,本文将有助于文本的文化层面的解读。关键词:哈姆雷特;莎士比亚;新历史主义;历史性;文本性Contents1. Introduction 12. An Intr
9、oduction to New Historicism 22.1 The definition of New Historicism 22.2 Major theories of New Historicism 23. Hamletthe Product of Shakespeares Negotiation with the Historical Context 43.1 The dynamic role Shakespeare played in creating Hamlet 43.1.1 Shakespeare, a secret Catholic sympathizer 43.1.2
10、 Shakespeares interest in mental problems 53.2 The submissive role Shakespeare played in creating Hamlet 74. HamletA Realistic Representation of the Society in the Elizabethan Era 84.1 A brief account of the religious and social background of the Elizabethan era 94.2 Characters in Hamlet: typical fi
11、gures of the Elizabethan era 104.2.1The role of Hamlet in the text 104.2.2The role of Fortinbras in the text 115. The Historical Power of Hamlet 115.1 Dramatic level 125.2 Cultural level 136. Conclusion 14Works Cited 161. Introduction Shakespeares Hamlet has aroused hot discussions among many critic
12、s in all ages. From the early 17th century, the play was famous for its ghost and vivid dramatization of melancholy and insanity, leading to a procession of mad courtiers and ladies in Jacobean and Caroline drama. This view changed drastically in the 18th century, when critics regarded Hamlet as a h
13、eroa pure, brilliant young man thrust into unfortunate circumstances. For example, Gilbert Murray said in his “Hamlet and Orestes” that “The things that thrill and amaze us in Hamlet . but things belong to the old stories and the old magic rites” (171). By the 19th century, literary criticism came t
14、o focus more on character and less on plot. In the 20th century, criticism branched in several directions, discussed in context and interpretation. However, few critics pay much attention to its historical background. The author was invoked by them into a serious thinking about the specific relation
15、ship between Hamlet and its historical background. Is Hamlet deeply influenced by the historical background? Does it have some influence on the history in return? And how did Shakespeare create such a play at that particular time? New Historicism offers a perspective for authors thinking because “th
16、e relationship between history and text remain in the center of the New Historicist arguments” (Zhu G 260). The theories of New Historicism would provide me with wider and firmer basis to make a systematic study on the relationship between Hamlet and its historical context, which in this specific as
17、pect, could be more in depth than the previous studies. The author would like to divide her dissertation into mainly four parts. In chapter 1, the author would give a brief introduction is given to New Historicism and its major theories, especially those which are feasible for the research on Hamlet
18、 to offer a theoretical basis for my research. Author would focus on the author, Shakespeare in chapter 2, applying some theories of New Historicism such as “social energy” and “negotiation” to analyze how Shakespeare produced Hamlet. The next two chapters deal with the relationship between the text
19、 Hamlet and the historical context of the Elizabethan Era with the help of the well-known New Historicist dictum of “historicity of texts” and “textuality of history” separately. In chapter 3, the author would discuss the influence of history on the text which makes the play a realistic recording of
20、 the Elizabethan Era. And the author would discuss in chapter 4 the influence of the text on the historical contextthe historical power of Hamlet. On the whole, the author would do a research on Shakespeares Hamlet from the perspective of New Historicism in order to show the important value of this
21、play to analyze inter-influence between the play and the historical context of the Elizabethan Era, and to approach again to the relationship between history and text.2. An Introduction to New Historicism2.1 The definition of New Historicism According to the New World Encyclopedia, “New Historicism
22、is an approach to literary criticism and literary theory based on the premise that a literary work should be considered a product of the time, place, and historical circumstances of its composition rather than as an isolated work of art or text”. New Historicism suggests literature must be studied a
23、nd interpreted within the context of both the history of the author and the history of the critic. New Historicists aim simultaneously to understand the work through its historical context and to understand cultural and intellectual history through literature, which documents the new discipline of t
24、he history of ideas. Unlike previous historical criticism, which limited itself to simply demonstrating how a work reflected its time, it evaluates how the work is influenced by the time in which the author wrote it. It also examines the social sphere in which the author moved the psychological back
25、ground of the writer, and the books and theories that may have influenced him or her. In New Historicists eyes, “a text can have neither a unified ideology nor an entirely aesthetic function” (Colebrook 24-25).2.2 Major theories of New Historicism New Historicism borrows the “Power Theory” from the
26、famous Post-Structuralist Michel Foucault to analyze in depth the detailed relations between history and text. In Foucaults theory, power refers the relations of domination and resistance which saturate our social, political and cultural relations, but it can also refer to the ways in which power is
27、 a productive, even pleasurable, part of our existence. It is everywhere; not because it embraces everything, but because it comes from everywhere (Foucault 93). Obviously, “power” here has a much broader application than the words like “politics” and “economy”, which are used by the traditional his
28、toricism. “Power also needs to have subversion, otherwise it would be without the opportunity to justify itself, and to make itself visible as power” (Brannigan 8). As a result, certain text could be subversive to some extent, in the interest of power. Foucaults principal interest is how power diffu
29、ses itself in systems of authority and how it affects of truth produced within discourses which in themselves are neither true nor false. In New Historicists opinion, literary texts are placed in the specific historical context and related to other non-literary texts which constructed within other s
30、pecific historical context; similarly, history is regarded as a text of interrelated contexts. “Different New Historicists may have different inclinations to historicity and sexuality” (Zhu G 260). This is just the famous New Historicist dictum of “historicity of text and textuality of history”, whi
31、ch based on the New Historicist Louis Montroses theory. In Louis Montroses most famous dictum, the new orientation to history in literary studies may be characterized as a dynamic dialogue between literature and history and it has a reciprocal concern with “the historicity of texts and the textualit
32、y of history”. History can influence text and in the meanwhile, it can also be influenced by text and is constituted by various texts. “The relationship between history and text remains in the centre of the New Historicist arguments” (Zhu G 206).Another important theory New Historicism has established is about the “writer”. Stephen Greenblatt argues that the writer as a subject is always doing “self-fashioning” within the historical context. We can understand the key point of this “Writer
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