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8. According to the text, how does Hamlet's relationship with Gertrude differ from Oedipus's situation? a. Hamlet's desires remain repressed b. Hamlet openly hates his mother c. Hamlet has no complex at all d. Hamlet loves his stepfather 9. What does Ernest Jones suggest about certain mental processes? a. They are always conscious b. They are culturally influenced c. They never change d. They are purely biological 10. How does Hamlet's self-reproach manifest according to Freud? a. Through physical illness b. Through political action c. Through revenge plotting d. Through delayed action 11. What role does Shakespeare's son Hamnet play in Freud's analysis? a. None at all b. Provides biographical context c. Proves Hamlet's madness d. Explains the ghost's role 12. How does the text explain Hamlet's disgust with his mother's remarriage? a. It's purely political b. It's financially motivated c. It represents biblical sin d. It's merely an act 13. What happens to Hamlet's psychological barriers after Gertrude's death? a. They become stronger b. They remain unchanged c. They dissolve d. They transfer to Ophelia 14. What does Hamlet's comparison of his mother to an animal suggest? a. Her superior instincts b. Her lack of morality

Question

8. According to the text, how does Hamlet's relationship with Gertrude differ from Oedipus's situation? a. Hamlet's desires remain repressed b. Hamlet openly hates his mother c. Hamlet has no complex at all d. Hamlet loves his stepfather 9. What does Ernest Jones suggest about certain mental processes? a. They are always conscious b. They are culturally influenced c. They never change d. They are purely biological 10. How does Hamlet's self-reproach manifest according to Freud? a. Through physical illness b. Through political action c. Through revenge plotting d. Through delayed action 11. What role does Shakespeare's son Hamnet play in Freud's analysis? a. None at all b. Provides biographical context c. Proves Hamlet's madness d. Explains the ghost's role 12. How does the text explain Hamlet's disgust with his mother's remarriage? a. It's purely political b. It's financially motivated c. It represents biblical sin d. It's merely an act 13. What happens to Hamlet's psychological barriers after Gertrude's death? a. They become stronger b. They remain unchanged c. They dissolve d. They transfer to Ophelia 14. What does Hamlet's comparison of his mother to an animal suggest? a. Her superior instincts b. Her lack of morality

8. According to the text, how does Hamlet's relationship with Gertrude differ from
Oedipus's situation?
a. Hamlet's desires remain repressed
b. Hamlet openly hates his mother
c. Hamlet has no complex at all
d. Hamlet loves his stepfather
9. What does Ernest Jones suggest about certain mental processes?
a. They are always conscious
b. They are culturally influenced
c. They never change
d. They are purely biological
10. How does Hamlet's self-reproach manifest according to Freud?
a. Through physical illness
b. Through political action
c. Through revenge plotting
d. Through delayed action
11. What role does Shakespeare's son Hamnet play in Freud's analysis?
a. None at all
b. Provides biographical context
c. Proves Hamlet's madness
d. Explains the ghost's role
12. How does the text explain Hamlet's disgust with his mother's remarriage?
a. It's purely political
b. It's financially motivated
c. It represents biblical sin
d. It's merely an act
13. What happens to Hamlet's psychological barriers after Gertrude's death?
a. They become stronger
b. They remain unchanged
c. They dissolve
d. They transfer to Ophelia
14. What does Hamlet's comparison of his mother to an animal suggest?
a. Her superior instincts
b. Her lack of morality

Solution

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Answer

8. a. Hamlet's desires remain repressed<br />9. b. They are culturally influenced<br />10. d. Through delayed action<br />11. b. Provides biographical context<br />12. c. It represents biblical sin<br />13. c. They dissolve<br />14. b. Her lack of morality
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