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I will pay for the following article Hamlet and Oedipus. The work is to be 4 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.
I will pay for the following article Hamlet and Oedipus. The work is to be 4 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. To gather information, both Hamlet and Oedipus use similar means, specifically which arises from their own interest of their father’s death. This particular pursuit by both is one which is common for detective stories and has created a formulaic response that provides tension, conflict and interest from the reader. Using this formula becomes important for both characters to begin solving the mystery of the murder and to look at the various types of speculations which will prove the case correctly in the end. The main formula which is used includes a psychological response followed by asking others for information, then leading to the eventual evidence about the death. After this point, there is the ability to make accusations to those who may have been responsible for the murder. In “Hamlet,” this process begins with his instant psychological response that his father didn’t die as was suspected by the majority population. His suspicions continue to arise until he is able to connect to forms of gossip in the community about the father’s death, specifically which begins with the beliefs of Horatio who has claimed that he has seen his father’s ghost. Once the information from the accusations have been confirmed, Hamlet uses a play to accuse his uncle of the death of his father by proving that he is guilty and interacting the steps he took with this death. (Shakespeare, 37). The same type of information is gathered with “Oedipus.” The information is gathered from a blind seer who prophesizes the death. This is followed by confessions of the Queen and mother of Oedipus, news from a messenger and information which has spread about the death. The details are given through the accounted details, similar to the play Hamlet reveals the death in, which is followed by the downfall of Oedipus (Sophocoles, 17). Using the Supernatural Not only is there a specific process for finding information and evidence. There is also the use of the supernatural, both which begin the suspicion of the main characters and lead to the eventual truth about the situation. The concept of the supernatural is used to create suspicion and a psychological response from those who are involved in finding out about the murder of their father. The concept is one which is believed to hold dignity and moral rights throughout the stories while creating an understanding of what goes beyond the expected in both narratives. The detective work becomes possible only because each is able to believe and investigate from the unknown perspective first (Li, 6). With Hamlet, the concept of the supernatural comes from seeing the ghost of his father, first by another individual and then by him. This leads to the expectations that Hamlet has gone mad. However, there are several who see the ghost entering and leaving before this is made. The information given to Hamlet occurs when he asks why the ghost has come back. “Be thou a spirit of health, or goblin damned, / Bring with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell / Be thy intents wicked or charitable, / Thou coms’t in such a questionable shape / That I will speak to thee. I’ll call thee Hamlet, / King, father, royal Dane. Oh answer me” (Shakespeare, 132). This particular quote shows how the information comes from the ghost first.