Comparison of Hamlet's Madness and Reason and Salesman's Death Everyone can really decide whether people are crazy or reasonable. In William Shakespeare's "Hamlet" and Arthur Miller's "The Death of a Salesman", the two protagonists Hamlet and Willy Lohman raised this issue, but in both cases they are crazy for different reasons. Three actions prove how their madness will affect their lives. These actions ignore their responsibilities, adversely affect others, and ultimately divert their own attention.
Crazy approach: Hamlet's sensitivity through relationships with Omphia, Hamlet and Leah with Lear King, Shakespeare combines crazy themes with two characters. One is motivating just like crazy. Hamlet's insanity is often questioned. This article argues that the contradictory nature of each theater, Ophelia of Hamlet and Edgar of King Lear, are balanced arguments against another personality madness or rationality. A more definitive distinction of Lear between Lear's vulnerability and Edgar's craziness to make the relationship between Ophelia's collapse and Hamlet's "Northwest-Northwest" crazy brand more clear. Both plays have features in every aspect of reason, but in Hamlet this distinction is not as clear as Lear King. Better understanding of relationships in Hamlet by using more explicit relationships in King Lear
Comparison of Salesman's Death and Hamlet's Madness and Kansei Can anyone truly judge whether a person is crazy or wise? In William Shakespeare's "Hamlet" and Arthur Miller's "The Death of a Salesman", the two protagonists Hamlet and Willy Lohman raised this issue, but in both cases they are crazy for different reasons. Three actions prove how their madness will affect their lives. These behaviors ignore the fact that they can not take care of themselves. Shakespeare's "Hamlet" shows how men in the 16th century dealt with women. Most of the instructions did not interfere, but some interfered. In the 16th century, women should respond to men's wishes. Through the script, Ophelia first followed her father and brother's wish, then ignored social norms, then crazy, and she never got her identity. In order to maintain control, Hamlet's men teach Ophelia to fear her every day, but this is commonplace.