In Hamlet, Soviet Shakespearean scholars and the Soviet theater have discovered the tragedy of a humanist’s lost illusions in the face of victorious evil. Turgenev emphasized Hamlet’s inclination to self-analysis and his skepticism. In the speech “Hamlet and Don Quixote” (1860) I. Belinskii, on the other hand, viewed Hamlet as a passionate exposer of evil, strong even in his ruin. Schlegel), the image of Hamlet became a negative designation (Hamletism) for such characteristics as disillusionment, pessimism, and bitter reflections on the contradictory nature of existence. In the interpretation of the German romantics (A. von Goethe saw in Hamlet a man of thought, not action, who lacked the strength to meet the task of revenge forced upon him. Shakespeare portrayed Hamlet as a reflective person who doubted traditional attitudes. The hero of the tragedy of the same name by Shakespeare (1601 published, 1603).
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