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Hamlet Act III

Hamlet Act III. Scene i. Scene One. We have now viewed two film versions of the “To be or not to be” soliloquy. Which one strikes you as the more memorable? Why? What does the Gibson version deliver that the Branagh version does not, and vice versa?. Soliloquy Analysis.

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Hamlet Act III

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  1. Hamlet Act III Scene i

  2. Scene One • We have now viewed two film versions of the “To be or not to be” soliloquy. • Which one strikes you as the more memorable? Why? What does the Gibson version deliver that the Branagh version does not, and vice versa?

  3. Soliloquy Analysis • As AP students, I would like you to strive for a slightly more sophisticated explication and analysis.

  4. Soliloquy Explication Example • Here is a sample paraphrase and analysis of lines 56-60 . This is an example of the depth I would like you to achieve in your own analysis. Please copy this down:

  5. Soliloquy Explication • Paraphrase and Analyze the following lines • 60-64 • 64-68 • 68-76 • 76-82 • 83 • 84-88 • This is due on Wednesday. Remember: You may work with a study group on this, including AVID tutorials or HW Central ad hoc groups, but you will be turning in your own work.

  6. Ophelia enters the Scene • What do the first two lines by the two lovers reveal about their previous relationship? • By opening the interaction between Ophelia and Hamlet with _________, Shakespeare is implying ____ (about their relationship). • What does the line “Ha, ha! are you honest” suggest? • The word “honest” is a double entendre, which could mean ___ or ___. By asking this question, Hamlet implies ___which will likely affect Ophelia ___.

  7. Put yourself in Hamlet’s shoes, why do you suppose he says “I loved you not”? • The implication behind Hamlet’s declaration that he never loved Ophelia is _____. It may imply that ___. • What lines indicate that Hamlet suspects Polonius as the reason for Ophelia’s spurning of his love? Why does it matter?

  8. Conclusions • What conclusion does the king come to at the end of scene one? • What conclusion does Polonius come to at the end of the scene?

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