Love of revenge is strange. It is powerful, free and blind. And a lot of fun continues. But what happens often after love is the opposite of love. When a person loses love, there is a series of emotions that they will catch. One of the darkest, strongest and most prominent emotions that happen to people is revenge. Crucible and The Scarlet Letter are classic and obsolete stories based on love, lost love, and revenge. In The Scarlet Letter, Chillingsworth and Hester should fall in love.
In this article we will study psychology of revenge. We discuss issues related to defining vengeance first. I believe there is no clear standard to judge action as motivation for revenge. Revenge is an explanation based on the behavior of the perception attribute of the actor. Next, we discuss the physical, social and psychological costs and benefits associated with retaliation. Then I will check the spread of retaliation. In distinguishing revenant desire from revenge, we question the concept of revenge as an automatic or universal response to injustice. We emphasize the four factors that influence whether fraud victims choose retaliation. The persistence of anger, the recognition of cost of revenge, the cultural and religious values of revenge, and the existence of an external system that can restore justice for victims.
The tragedy of revenge (sometimes called revenge drama, revenge drama or bloody tragedy) is a kind of theory whose main theme is the fatal result of revenge and revenge. American educator Ashley H. Thorndiek officially announced the tragedy of revenge in the 1902 article "Relationship between Hamlet and contemporary revenge drama", recorded the progress of the protagonist's revenge plan, and often murderers and Avengers Brought about his own death. This type first appeared in the early modern British published by Thomas Kid's "Tragedy of Spain" in the latter half of the 16th century. Early works such as Jasper Heywood 's Seneca (1560' s), Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville 's play Gorbuduc (1561) were also regarded as a tragedy of revenge. Other tragedies of famous revenge include the tragedy of William Shakespeare's Hamlet (1599-1602), Titus Andronics (1588-1593), Thomas Middleton's Avengers (circa 1606).
In this study of revenge and revenge of Elizabeth 's revenge, the two plays I see are the "Hamlet" of William Shakespeare and "The Tragedy of Avengers" of Thomas Middleton. After first seeing the handling of the playwright 's Avengers' character, the other characters in the play will handle the Avengers. Their basic theme is similar to sticking to the tournament, but the two dramas present a contrasting picture ... Hamlet - a tragedy of revenge? Shakespeare's tragedy A mysterious series of considerations related to revenge of Hamlet makes this article an interesting experience. Ruth Nevo explains the uncertainty occupied by the protagonist's most famous monologue in Acts 3 and 4 in revenge. I can not read the lecture