Hamlet’s Religions

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2011, Vol 2, Issue 3

Abstract

Pastoral challenges prompted pietists among Elizabethan Catholics and Calvinists to commend what historians now call an inward turn whereby the faithful, in a sense, become their own confessors. This article suggests that spiritual exercises or soliloquies Shakespeare scripted for his Hamlet (and, less so, for Angelo in Measure for Measure) compare favorably with the devotional literature that underscored the importance of self-analysis, intra-psychic conflict, and contrition. The argument here is not that the playwright’s piety resembled his Hamlet’s but that the latter reflected efforts to structure desire in the religions of the time struggling for survival and recognition. References to passages in Shakespeare plays (act, scene) appear parenthetically in the text. Unless otherwise indicated in the bibliography appended to this article, all early printed material is accessible at the Early English Books database, http://eebo.chadwyck.com/home, verified June 1, 2011.

Authors and Affiliations

Peter Iver Kaufman

Keywords

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  • EP ID EP25208
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel2030427
  • Views 380
  • Downloads 16

How To Cite

Peter Iver Kaufman (2011). Hamlet’s Religions. Religions, 2(3), -. https://www.europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25208