Hamlet: The Conscious Being
Essay retrieved from http://www.antiessays.com/free-essays/29867.htmlHamlet: The Conscious Being“To be, or not to be, that is the question” (Hamlet 63). The consciousness and awareness of living is a frightening and puzzling thing. Hamlet, a very conscious being, is not only frightenedof the consciousness of existence, but he is aware of the tragic outcome of his life. Because of this “awareness”, Hamlet is reluctant to make any seemingly valiant actions in order to slowdown or even to reverse his impending doom. Nevertheless, because Hamlet is completelyconscious of his being and of the world he lives in, deep down he is aware that despite hisattempts to change the world he lives in, his outcome will still be tragic. Hamlet’s “to be or not to be” speech is less about whether or not he should take his own life, but “Rather it reflects thegrowing inner-self, which he sometimes attempts to reject” (Bloom 405) By taking one look atHamlet’s “to be or not to be speech”, one could argue that Hamlet is a coward contemplatingsuicide. However, instead of than being a coward, in his speech, Hamlet contemplates theunknown darkness of after death, his heroic obligations, and his growing inner-self. Critic HaroldBloom in his book Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human states,His (Hamlet) is not primarily a world of social alienation, or of the absence (or presence) of God.Rather, his world is the growing inner-self, which he sometimes attempts to reject, but whichnevertheless he celebrates almost continuously, though implicitly (Bloom 405).Hamlet’s world, an isolated world from the social society, is ruled by the consciousness withindarkness. He is constantly pushing the boundary between light and dark; conscious andunconscious. As a skeptic, Hamlet has no fixed ideas, no beliefs. Everything that motivates himcomes from what he perceives as consciousness. His desire to kill Claudius comes from hisunconscious, the place where all desires and motivations are formed. In Hamlet’s “To be, or notto be” speech, he contemplates suicide not as an escape from life, but rather as an escape fromhis “sullied flesh”(Hamlet 23). This imagery of spoiled flesh reflects the image of the poisoningand polluting of the kingdom and of Hamlet’s own being. He is aware that the flesh is rottingaway and restricting him from reaching out and embracing the darkness of the unconscious.Hamlet is indifferent to physical death. His push to leave the light and enter the darkness of theunconscious drives him to question his own motives.Hamlet constantly attempts to reject his “growing inner-self” because he himself is unsure of theunknown. When Hamlet first meets his father’s ghost, he leaves behind the world of reality andlight and enters a world with no reason, reality, and light. He enters the world of unconscious, theworld of darkness. This new world of darkness poses as an unknown that makes Hamlet uneasy
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