Human Nature and the Tragic Vision in Three Plays by William Shakespeare: A Psychoanalytic Reassesement of Hamlet, Macbeth and Othello

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This book peruses human nature and the tragic vision in the light of William Shakespeare’s tragedies. The three tragedies under my analysis: Hamlet, Macbeth and Othello are domestic tragedies since they raise the issue of racism and call for the conflict between husbands and their wives, between an uncle and a nephew, love and incestuous relations, disloyalty in marriage, and the notion of father and mother. Human nature is therefore striking and entirely embedded in these three Shakespearian dramas through the confrontation of male characters with female ones in a dialectics of power and reciprocal domination. This research work shows that all races and all sexes fall equally in the traps of bad human nature and cruelly endure the consequences of their pranks, their shortcomings, their imperfections, their unreasonable impulses, their excessive ambitions, their immoderate passions, their vengeance and their jealousy. The good or bad human nature then depends neither on the skin color nor on the sex of the human being: whether black or white, man or woman we are all liable to evil. Thus, this book shows that we have to develop the culture of acceptance and tolerance bearing in mind that everybody is fallible and has to feel responsible and stay watchful over his own human nature sometimes misleading, sometimes worth of praise.

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Author

Title

ISBN

Size

,

Publication Date

October 2018

No. of Pages

362

Author information

Paméssou Walla, defended his Doctorate Degree in English literature in 2011 at the University of Lomé where he is currently serving as a Senior Lecturer of English Literature. His research works are mainly based on women emancipation, the mediation and fellowship between men and women, blacks and whites without discrimination of race and gender in English literature, especially English drama across Elizabethan, Victorian, modern and postmodern periods.