✍️ 🧑‍🦱 💚 Autor:innen verdienen bei uns doppelt. Dank euch haben sie so schon 379.645 € mehr verdient. → Mehr erfahren 💪 📚 🙏

Shakespeare's Hal in "Henry IV" as the Prototypical Machiavellian Prince? An Analysis

Shakespeare's Hal in "Henry IV" as the Prototypical Machiavellian Prince? An Analysis

von Benjamin Waldraff
Softcover - 9783668071957
15,95 €
  • Versandkostenfrei
Auf meine Merkliste
  • Hinweis: Print on Demand. Lieferbar in 5 Tagen.
  • Lieferzeit nach Versand: ca. 1-2 Tage
  • inkl. MwSt. & Versandkosten (innerhalb Deutschlands)

Autorenfreundlich Bücher kaufen?!

Beschreibung

Studienarbeit aus dem Jahr 2014 im Fachbereich Didaktik - Englisch - Literatur, Werke, Note: 2,0, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (Department für Anglistik und Amerikanistik), Veranstaltung: Shakespeare's Histories, Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: This paper aims to show how Shakespeare portrays Hal as the prototypical Machiavellian prince - legitimizing him as the true king. In order to prove that, I will first look at Hal¿s situation at the beginning of 1 Henry IV, then move on to his staged reformation, and lastly discuss how he uses the advice given by Machiavelli in ¿The Prince¿.

How do you justify a monarchy? Usually it is through the divine right of kings and the belief that they are sent by god to rule in his name on earth. The question remains however, how the rule of a king can be justified if he cannot look back on a long line of royal ancestors or came to power through force and by deposing the rightful king. This question of legitimacy greatly concerned the Italian politician Niccoló Machiavelli in his most famous work ¿The Prince¿, tying to establish guidelines on ensuring stability of a new ruler. Simultaneously, four of Shakespeare¿s Histories engage greatly with the theme of legitimacy. This paper analyses the portrayal of Henry IV's son Hal in this respect.

Details

Verlag GRIN Verlag
Ersterscheinung Oktober 2015
Maße 21 cm x 14.8 cm x 0.2 cm
Gewicht 45 Gramm
Format Softcover
ISBN-13 9783668071957
Auflage 1. Auflage
Seiten 20