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The Fractured Prince: Trauma, Temporality, and the Suicidal Impulse in Shakespeare’s Hamlet

Year 2025, Volume: 7 Issue: 1, 72 - 86, 30.06.2025

Abstract

This inquiry examines the psychological landscape of William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, positing that his renowned suicidal ideation transcends interpretations of mere melancholia or philosophical abstraction. It is argued that Hamlet's profound existential distress and contemplation of self-annihilation are significant symptomatic manifestations of unprocessed psychological trauma. Synthesizing trauma theories, particularly Cathy Caruth's "unclaimed experience" and Judith Lewis Herman’s phenomenological framework (hyperarousal, intrusion, constriction), this analysis re-evaluates the impact of King Hamlet's death and Queen Gertrude's precipitous remarriage. These events constitute a foundational traumatic rupture, precipitating crises in Hamlet's experience of temporality, selfhood, and language. His initial cry, "O, that this too, too sullied flesh would melt" (I.ii.133), is scrutinized as an immediate somatic expression of this breach. The "To be or not to be" soliloquy (III.i.64-98) is interpreted as a tortured articulation of a trauma-induced yearning for oblivion, complicated by "the dread of something after death" (III.i.86) amplified by traumatic anxiety. Hamlet's "delay" is reframed as traumatic paralysis—Herman’s "constriction of agency" —a state suspended between the compulsion to act and the impulse towards self-destruction. The study explores Hamlet's linguistic fragmentation, his "antic disposition" (I.v.192), the Ghost as an embodiment of unprocessed trauma, and somatic expressions of his wounds as evidence of a besieged psyche. Situating Hamlet's suffering within Renaissance cultural frameworks and contemporary trauma theory, this investigation illuminates the psychological verisimilitude of Shakespeare’s portrayal, offering a nuanced understanding of trauma's literary representation.

References

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There are 14 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects British and Irish Language, Literature and Culture
Journal Section Research Article
Authors

Asım Aydın 0009-0007-2557-4659

Sami Akgöl 0000-0002-0073-2119

Submission Date June 20, 2025
Acceptance Date June 26, 2025
Publication Date June 30, 2025
Published in Issue Year 2025 Volume: 7 Issue: 1

Cite

APA Aydın, A., & Akgöl, S. (2025). The Fractured Prince: Trauma, Temporality, and the Suicidal Impulse in Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Eurasian Journal of English Language and Literature, 7(1), 72-86.