"The Rotten State of Danemark": The Discourse of Reason of State in Shakespeare's Hamlet Cover Image

"The Rotten State of Danemark": The Discourse of Reason of State in Shakespeare's Hamlet
"The Rotten State of Danemark": The Discourse of Reason of State in Shakespeare's Hamlet

Author(s): Amira Aloui
Subject(s): Studies of Literature, Philology
Published by: Stowarzyszenie Nauczycieli Akademickich Języka Angielskiego PASE
Keywords: Reason of State; civil reason; politics; transition; Hamlet;delay;

Summary/Abstract: Early modern politics displayed a transition from civil reason to Rea- son of State. An extensive body on the new political discourse of Reason of State in continental Europe started to emerge, outlining a new grammar for the state, politics, and princes. The latter had undermined the traditional humanist Chris- tian discourse of politics. This paper will address how Shakespeare’s Hamlet de- bates Reason of State onstage—an issue that has been little dealt with in the early modern scholarship of Shakespeare, or, at best, dismissed as marginalia. The pro- tagonist’s famous delay and his political and philosophical reflections can be read in the light of contemporary political discourses to which Reason of State had become so central. Despite Hamlet’s resistance, the play ends with the triumph of political realism introduced mainly by Giovanni Botero in his oeuvre Ragion di Stato. Hamlet is not the exception in this regard. Reason of State became one of the focal subjects of early modern tragedy as I will be showing in this paper.

  • Issue Year: 7/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 7-19
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English