PSYCHOLOGICAL MECHANISMS OF TRAGEDY IN HAMLET AND MACBETH

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Abstrak:





This article explores the psychological mechanisms underlying tragedy in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Macbeth through a comparative analytical approach. The study examines the protagonists’ inner conflicts, patterns of consciousness, moral dilemmas, and decision-making processes that ultimately lead to tragic consequences. Hamlet is analyzed as a character governed by reflective consciousness and intellectualized anxiety, whose excessive introspection delays decisive action. Macbeth, by contrast, is portrayed as an ambition-driven figure whose impulsive actions trigger psychological disintegration marked by guilt, paranoia, and hallucination. The article argues that Shakespeare constructs two distinct psychological mechanisms of tragedy: paralysis through reflection and destruction through unchecked ambition.





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Shakespeare, W. Macbeth. Cambridge University Press.

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