Background
Type: Article

Hamlets catch-22: A psychoanalytic reading of hamlet and catch-22

Journal: Critical Survey (00111570)Year: Volume: 30Issue: 3Pages: 97 - 115
Azad B.Abbasi P.a
DOI:10.3167/cs.2018.300308Language: English

Abstract

The double-bind dilemma that Hamlet is engulfed in places him in a catch-22 situation from which there seems to be no way out. Locked in a psychological impasse exacerbated by a deficient Oedipal process due to the fathers death and mothers remarriage, he is driven into (feigning) insanity, a situation that brings him close to Yossarian, Hellers paranoid antihero who is as much inept in the face of the paternalistic ordeal he is subjected to as an army fighter. Evading the fear of castration on the one hand and becoming consumed with guilt for the incompetence to face the trial on the other give rise to problematic identities of both protagonists and numerous evasive strategies they plot. Nevertheless, through mainly linguistic/textual acts of defiance, these initially victimized subjects to the law of the father turn into rebels, mastering and thus making the Symbolic order backfire on itself. © Critical Survey.


Author Keywords

Catch-22Fort da gameHamletImaginary/symbolic/real orderJacques lacanMadnessMourningSigmund Freud