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Hamlet (place)

About: Hamlet (place) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2771 publications have been published within this topic receiving 16301 citations.


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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose to refer to these new and growing settlement nuclei as towns and the use of this term needs some justification, and they use this term for what they represent to the rural population.
Abstract: During the period since the Revolution of 1952 and the later agrarian reform a new settlement type has been created in the northern Altiplano and the sub-tropical valleys of the Yungas of La Paz. New nucleated settlements have been built by the rural people, largely spontaneously, and they represent a break with the dispersed pattern of dwellings that was the characteristic form of rural settlement prior to I952. In this paper I propose to refer to these new and growing settlement nuclei as towns and the use of this term needs some justification. If one seeks to use Wolfe's typology of Latin American rural settlements 1 to categorize the Bolivian new towns, then many would appear to be scarcely worthy of the name hamlet (caserlo) when judged by their size. But their inhabitants as well as people from neighbouring communities consider them to be urban and many of the larger nuclei have a maximum population during a week of 500-800 people: they offer a range of services and have administrative functions greater than their size would suggest. Despite their small size and having regard more for what they represent to the rural population, the new settlements to be described are urban, although not in the sense in which the term is generally understood by social scientists. These new towns vary in size between clusters of five or ten houses-at an early stage of development-to towns with I50 or more houses, a school offering perhaps four or five grades of primary education, a church and a municipal building (alcaldia). Many of the new settlements have administrative functions such as being a canton centre, the local centre for a group of peasant unions, or even a provincial section with a series of dependent

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

4 citations

Daniel Diana1
01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this article, the ghosts in Macbeth, Hamlet, and Julius Caesar are imagined apparitions and their appearances represent psychological manifestations of a character's guilt, and they are not real ghosts.
Abstract: In this paper, I attempt to prove that the ghosts in Macbeth, Hamlet, and Julius Caesar are imagined apparitions and that their appearances represent psychological manifestations of a character's guilt.

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Patrick Gill1
15 Nov 2012
TL;DR: The authors investigate the way in which three such writers employ allusions to/adaptations of Hamlet in their novels and what their respective stances reveal about their understanding of their role as canonical writers.
Abstract: Questions of gender, ethnicity and sexuality have all been raised by novelists intent on rewriting Shakespeare from the position of what have been seen as cultural margins. While discussions of such rewritings are ongoing, few concerted efforts have been made to trace a pattern in the treatment of Shakespearean allusion and adaptation at the hands of British and American writers of the literary mainstream. The present essay sets out to investigate the way in which three such writers —Ian McEwan, Graham Swift, and John Updike— employ allusion to/adaptations of Hamlet in their novels and what their respective stances reveal about their understanding of their role as canonical writers.

4 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202137
202060
201986
201894
2017100
2016117