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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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Book
05 Mar 1987
TL;DR: A list of illustrations for Hamlet and Harlequin can be found in this article, where the comic scene is described as follows: 1. Prologue - Hamlet 2. The comedy of skill 3. The four masks 4. The rest of the cast 5.
Abstract: List of illustrations 1. Prologue - Hamlet and Harlequin 2. The comedy of skill 3. The four masks 4. The rest of the cast 5. The comic scene 6. Triumph and decline 7. Epilogue 8. Bibliography 9. Notes 10. Index.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The scene of Hamlet discussing the skull of Yorick in the graveyard of Elsinore is one of the most famous scenes in the Shakespearean canon as mentioned in this paper, and it has been engraved on the popular mind as the most memorable single image of the melancholy Prince.
Abstract: T HE SCENE OF HAMLET CONTEMPLATING the skull of Yorick in the graveyard of Elsinore is one of the most famous in the Shakespearean canon. For actors and playgoers alike, it is a lasting favorite, and it has been engraved on the popular mind as the most memorable single image of the melancholy Prince. As far as we can now tell, Shakespeare's presentation of that scene was a striking innovation on the London stage when he introduced it in or about the year 1600.1 But Shakespeare was not creating de novo. There was a long and very popular tradition in which a young man was shown contemplating a skull, or commenting upon it, and scores of examples of this visual topos exist in various art forms. The greatest of these is Frans Hals's oil of A Young Man with a Skull [Figure I ]-which was once confidently identified as Hals's painting of Shakespeare's Hamlet. That identification has now given way to a recognition that-there was a broad and encompassing tradition which included both Shakespeare and Hals.2 That tradition was well known to the audiences for whom Shakespeare wrote. It was readily accessible in England as on the Continent through prints

18 citations

BookDOI
TL;DR: The Noisy Conflict of Half-truths 3. Fathers and Sons 4. A Smack of Hamlet 5. The Utility of Poetry 6. The Best That Is Known and Thought in the World 7. Culture and Liberty
Abstract: 1. Representative Man 2. The Noisy Conflict of Half-Truths 3. Fathers and Sons 4. A Smack of Hamlet 5. The Utility of Poetry 6. The Best That Is Known and Thought in the World 7. Culture and Liberty

18 citations


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