Abstract
As a significant female character in William Shakespeare’s tragedy Hamlet, Ophelia’s tragic fate reflects not only her personal emotional struggles but also the broader vulnerability and powerlessness of women in a patriarchal society. This paper examines the two major blows Ophelia suffers in the play: first, Hamlet’s emotional rejection and verbal abuse driven by the burden of revenge, and second, the accidental killing of her father, Polonius, by Hamlet. These dual traumas lead Ophelia from a once-protected and joyful girl into a state of psychological collapse and eventual death. Through close textual analysis and narrative interpretation, this study argues that Ophelia’s tragedy is not accidental but rather a consequence of the conflict between Renaissance humanism and feudal patriarchy. Her fate highlights the historical marginalization and instrumentalization of women under male-dominated structures of power.
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