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"The plays the thing/Wherein Ill catch the conscience": The Legal Community Reads HamletSan Diego State University, boyd4{at}mail.sdsu.edu This article explores the response of the contemporary legal community to Shakespeares Hamlet, a play that has garnered much attention from those who would investigate the complex intersections of law and literature. The particular focus of this article is the way legal scholars have interpreted Hamlets "problem," that is to say, his famous delay in carrying out acts of violent retribution at the behest of his murdered fathers ghost. Such scholarly speculations have much to tell us, for to consider the meaning of Hamlets delay is also to grapple with such critical issues as the relationship between private vengeance and the law and the ethical meaning of violence in any codified legal system. This article thus surveys several representative readings of the Hamlets "problem" in an effort to outline how the contemporary legal community has engaged the deepest legal and ethical questions residing at the center of Shakespeares play.
Key Words: law and literature Hamlet revenge Hamlets delay law and ethical choice
Law, Culture and the Humanities, Vol. 5, No. 3,
425-451 (2009) |
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