Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Existentialism
Shakespeare’s Hamlet shows existentialism because Hamlet is always thinking about stuff like life and death and he feels confused about what to do. Existentialism means thinking about yourself and life and how it is hard, and Hamlet does that many times because he has a lot of problems and he doesn’t know how to fix them. When his father dies Hamlet gets really upset and sad and does not know how to act and he keeps thinking instead of doing things which shows he is existential.
Hamlet sees the ghost and he doesn’t know if it is real or not but he still thinks about it and asks a lot of questions which shows he is overwhelmed and doesn’t understand life anymore. He says stuff like “why is this” and this shows he is confused. Later Hamlet tries to do the play to see if Claudius is guilty, but he still waits to take action and this means he is emotional and cannot make decisions.
Hamlet also thinks about suicide in the “to be or not to be” part where he wonders if life is worth it and says that pain makes people want to die. This is existential because he is confused and scared and doesn’t know what to do. In the end he kills Claudius and this shows he finally makes a choice but it is too late and he dies anyway. Hamlet is existential because he has a hard time and feels alone and does not know what is real.
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Thank you for your request! Let’s revisit your paragraph with an eye toward strengthening Evidence & Commentary.
⚠️ Evidence & Commentary: 1/4
→ Feedback:
Your evidence is mostly general or paraphrased (“to be or not to be” part), and your commentary summarizes rather than analyzes Hamlet’s existential struggle. Targeting one moment, quoting Hamlet’s words, and directly explaining how they demonstrate existentialism will help you move toward a higher score.
Hints for Improvement:
• Would you like to try rewriting a sentence or two with a direct quote and analysis?
• Shall we practice linking the commentary more clearly to existentialism?
• Do you want to attempt a deeper exploration of Hamlet’s language in the soliloquy?
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Score Overview (per AP Literature and Composition Rubric):
- Thesis: 1/1
- Evidence & Commentary: 1/4
- Sophistication: 0/1
Total: 2/6
1. Thesis
- Rubric Alignment: Clear claim that Hamlet is “existential,” with brief reasoning.
- Strength: Responds to the prompt with an arguable, defensible interpretation.
- Growth Target: Make the thesis more specific about what existentialism means for Hamlet’s experience.
2. Evidence & Commentary
- Rubric Alignment: Some text-based events are described (the ghost, “to be or not to be”), but evidence is general and mainly summarized. Connections to existentialism are asserted but not developed.
- Strength: References major moments in the play linked to the theme.
- Growth Target:
– Use direct, specific quotations or specific references.
– Expand your commentary from summary (“he is confused”) to explanation (how Hamlet’s confusion fits existential thought).
– Integrate literary techniques: How does Shakespeare use soliloquies, metaphor, or irony to show Hamlet’s existential struggle?
3. Sophistication
- Rubric Alignment: Does not yet explore complexities or demonstrate insight beyond summary. Focus stays on broad, surface-level claims.
- Strength: Attempts interpretation and links ideas to existentialism.
- Growth Target:
– Consider how Hamlet’s existential struggles create tension or raise broader questions about life, death, or meaning.
– Address alternative perspectives: Could Hamlet’s inaction be seen as strategy rather than confusion?
– Try to add complexity or context for your argument.
4. Invitations for Revision and Next Steps (choose one or more):
- a. Clarify and focus your thesis: What about Hamlet’s thinking is uniquely existential, not just confused? What big idea about life or self emerges in his struggle?
- b. Deepen evidence and commentary: Select a specific moment (e.g., “To be or not to be” soliloquy, ghost scene, or play-within-a-play) and give a direct quote or vivid description. Then, explain how this moment embodies existentialism.
- c. Engage more complexity: What are the consequences of Hamlet’s existential thinking? How does it affect his actions or relationships? Consider both benefits (awareness, questioning) and costs (indecision, pain).
Choose the *Your Thoughts** button to let me know your reaction to the feedback I’ve provided and how you might revise, or if there’s a specific section you want to dig in on next – select Continue with AI to ask me for more specific feedback.*
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Score Overview (per AP Literature and Composition Rubric):
- Thesis: 1/1
- Evidence & Commentary: 1/4
- Sophistication: 0/1
Total: 2/6
1. Clarifying Your Task:
You’re writing about Hamlet and existentialism and want help choosing and using textual evidence more effectively. Strong evidence comes from direct, specific references—ideally with act, scene, line numbers—so you can connect evidence to existential themes in detail.
2. Evidence-Building Scaffolds:
Consider these Hamlet passages as starting points for selecting textual evidence:
- Act 1, Scene 2 (lines 129–159): “O, that this too too solid flesh would melt…”
Prompt: How does Hamlet’s first soliloquy reveal his crisis with existence and self-worth?
- Act 1, Scene 5 (lines 92-112): “The time is out of joint…”
Prompt: What does this line show about Hamlet’s anxiety and alienation after encountering the Ghost?
- Act 3, Scene 1 (lines 56-88): “To be, or not to be…”
Prompt: How does this soliloquy capture Hamlet’s questioning of meaning and the value of existence?
3. Commentary Expansion Moves:
- “How does Hamlet’s language here show both doubt and a search for meaning?”
- “What do Hamlet’s questions and metaphors suggest about his attitude toward existence?”
- “How does Shakespeare use the soliloquy form to let Hamlet (and us) explore deep uncertainty?”
4. Next Steps / Invitations for Revision:
- a. Choose one quote above and add it to your draft (with act/scene/line citation).
- b. Annotate the quote in your own words: What is Hamlet worried about? How does that relate to existential themes (choices, uncertainty, meaning)?
- **c. Try to discuss how the literary form (soliloquy, metaphor, irony) is helping reveal Hamlet’s existential struggle.
Choose the *Your Thoughts** button to let me know your reaction to the feedback I’ve provided and how you might revise, or if there’s a specific section you want to dig in on next – select Continue with AI to ask me for more specific feedback.*
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Restatement of Your Goal:
You want to make your writing voice stronger, more distinctive, and more analytical as you revise your essay on existentialism in Shakespeare’s Hamlet. No score—just revision moves and guiding questions.
Section 1: Finding Your Ideas’ Energy
- Where do you feel most interested or intrigued by Hamlet’s thinking?
- Can you pinpoint his most intense confusion or realization?
- Try to express these locations in your voice, not just summary.
Section 2: Pushing Commentary Beyond Summary
- What is uniquely existential about Hamlet?
- How might Hamlet’s questioning set him apart from other tragic heroes?
- Try: “What this shows about Hamlet’s mind is…” or “This detail reveals Hamlet’s struggle with…”
Section 3: Strengthening Specificity
- When you use quotes, can you choose lines that capture Hamlet’s mindset?
- Is “why is this” specific enough, or can you find a rich, brief quotation?
- How does Hamlet’s uncertainty *sound*—what words echo in your head from his speeches?
Section 4: Boosting Voice and Clarity
- Where do your own insights peek through?
- Can you take one moment and rewrite it in your terms, focusing on how Hamlet’s experience connects to modern feelings of uncertainty or indecision?
- Experiment: “When Hamlet ____, it reminds me of how ____.”
Section 5: Next Steps and Invitations for Revision
1. Highlight one sentence per paragraph where you find your voice most clearly—and revise it for clarity, energy, and focus.
2. Replace every vague word or phrase (“stuff like,” “he is existential”) with sharper, image-based or emotion-specific language.
3. Choose one moment in the play, quote it, and write two sentences explaining why Hamlet’s words capture an existential dilemma—use your own perspective!
Choose the *Your Thoughts** button to let me know your reaction to the feedback I’ve provided and how you might revise. Also click Your Thoughts to tell me to focus in on specific paragraphs or criteria. Always follow up by clicking Continue with AI, choose me again and ask me for more feedback.*
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Restatement:
You’re seeking ways to make your writing voice more specific and clear, to elevate your analysis of *Hamlet*’s existential themes. Here are focused tips and prompts to help you revise:
1. Move Beyond Generalization
- Pinpoint places where you use words like “stuff,” “things,” or “a lot.”
- Replace these with precise concepts, emotions, or moments from the play.
- Socratic prompt: What exactly is Hamlet thinking about in key soliloquies?
2. Integrate Textual Evidence Thoughtfully
- Instead of phrases like “he says stuff like ‘why is this,’” select and integrate an exact line from the play.
- Prompt: Which line or image from Hamlet best captures his existential uncertainty? Why?
3. Deepen and Clarify Commentary
- Don’t just state Hamlet is confused—break down what’s confusing him and how that tension creates meaning.
- Try: How does Hamlet’s indecision reflect existential ideas about choice and responsibility?
- Push past summary: How do Hamlet’s actions (or lack of action) shape your interpretation of him as an existential character?
4. Revise for Voice and Insight
- Consider your audience—what do you want them to feel or realize about Hamlet’s struggle?
- Prompt: How can you connect Hamlet’s existential crisis to broader questions about human experience?
- Practice a revision move: Try rephrasing a sentence as a claim about human experience, not just Hamlet as a character.
5. Next Revision Steps & Invitations
- Read your draft out loud: Where does it sound vague or repetitive? Mark those lines.
- Annotate the play for 1–2 sharp quotes that encapsulate Hamlet’s existential doubts; integrate them into your analysis.
- Experiment with replacing summary with “how” and “why” questions to push your commentary deeper (e.g., Why is Hamlet’s delay important? How does it speak to existential themes?)
- Reflect: If you had to capture Hamlet’s worldview in one nuanced sentence, what would it be?
Choose the Your Thoughts button to let me know your reaction to the feedback I’ve provided and how you might revise. Also click Your Thoughts to tell me to focus in on specific paragraphs or criteria. Always follow up by clicking Continue with AI*, choose me again and ask me for more feedback.”*
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Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Score: 2/6
- Thesis: 1
- Evidence & Commentary: 1
- Sophistication: 0
Restatement of Task/Feedback
You’re working on a first paragraph that connects Hamlet to existentialism, exploring how Hamlet’s thoughts and actions fit this philosophical theme.
Thesis
Your thesis attempts to link Hamlet’s indecisiveness and despair to existentialism. However, it needs a more specific, defensible claim—something arguable, not just a summary. The AP rubric values a clear claim with direction.
Evidence & Commentary
You include some textual details (“to be or not to be,” the ghost, the play test), but most evidence is paraphrased or summarized. Commentary is surface-level and drifts into repetition; it should explain how details specifically illustrate existentialism.
Sophistication
You gesture at big ideas (confusion, indecision, loneliness), but do not explore complexity, nuance, or alternative readings. The writing oversimplifies rather than delves deeper. AP sophistication comes from exploring gray areas or broader philosophical stakes.
Next Steps for Growth
1. Sharpen the thesis: What specific existential dilemma defines Hamlet? Can you make a claim about his struggle for meaning or agency?
2. Ground claims in textual evidence: Quote or closely reference key lines, and explain how Hamlet’s words (not just his feelings) reveal existential thought.
3. Move beyond summary: Why does Hamlet’s uncertainty matter? How does his philosophical struggle shape the play’s meaning or tragedy?
4. Invite complexity: Does Hamlet ever resist or challenge existential despair? Are there moments of clarity or resolve you might notice?
5. Writers grow by revising: Try reworking one section at a time (thesis, then evidence, then commentary). Read each claim and ask, “Why does this matter?” or “How do I know this?” to push your analysis deeper.
Choose the *Your Thoughts** button to let me know your reaction to the feedback I’ve provided and how you might revise. Also click Your Thoughts to tell me to focus in on specific paragraphs or criteria. Always follow up by clicking Continue with AI, choose me again and ask me for more feedback.*
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Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
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Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Score: 2/6
- Thesis: 1
- Evidence & Commentary: 1
- Sophistication: 0
Restatement of Task/Feedback
You want to strengthen your evidence and commentary—making your analysis of Hamlet more grounded in the text and more clearly linked to existentialism.
Scaffold: Levels of Evidence & Commentary
1. Textual Specificity: Identify a key quote (e.g., “to be or not to be”) and connect it directly to an existential idea.
2. Analytical Moves: Don’t just summarize Hamlet’s confusion; unpack what his questions reveal about the human search for meaning or fear of the unknown.
3. Link to Theme: How does Hamlet’s inaction illustrate existential belief in individual responsibility—or the burden of making choices without certainty?
Modeling Thought: Commentary Prompts
- “How does Hamlet’s soliloquy about death show existential anxiety?”
- “What does Hamlet’s hesitation suggest about free will or meaning?”
- “Where does Hamlet’s language show doubt or search for truth?”
Next Steps for Growth
1. Choose a quote: Pick a moment where Hamlet questions life or meaning—copy it out to create a focus for analysis.
2. Ask ‘how’ and ‘why’: After quoting, write: “This shows existentialism because…” and develop your explanation.
3. Connect commentary to theme: Show how each piece of evidence builds your claim about Hamlet’s existential struggle.
Choose the *Your Thoughts** button to let me know your reaction to the feedback I’ve provided and how you might revise. Also click Your Thoughts to tell me to focus in on specific paragraphs or criteria. Always follow up by clicking Continue with AI, choose me again and ask me for more feedback.*
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