Hamlet 's sexuality and aggression in "Humlet and one wife are one": Hamlet' s confrontation with her mother, Janet Adelman is the collapse of the boundaries of personal, sex and gender relations behind Hamlet 's plot behavior I believe. Disagreement between public (state) life and individual (love) life. The main cause of malfunction is the apparent sexual behavior, especially the expansion of body pollution due to mothers' sexual behavior. Janet Adelman considers her feminism as a gender discriminatory view of psychoanalysis and defines contamination as the power of a woman afraid of men.
At the heart of Freud's view is the relationship between Hamlet and his mother, and the examples of the aforementioned Hamlet King and Claudio. According to Freud, Hamlet is moved by unconscious sexual desire and deterioration. This sexual violence is against his mother and Claudius. The overall analysis of Hamlet's behavior is reflected in Jones' statement: "To the best of my knowledge, Hamlet's hesitation is due to some unconscious rage in his mission." I replied:
Providing these Freud and Jung 's views can lead to two separate conclusions about Hamlet' s unconscious motives. Freud's view suggests that Hamlet was unconsciously inspired by suppressed sexual desire and aggression. Hamlet saw the marriage of King Claudius and King Gertrude, and he remembered his childhood fantasy to marry Gilles. Likewise, when Hamlet discovered that Claudius had killed his father, he also remembered his childhood fantasy. An unconscious desire to kill Hamlet 's father and marry a mother was classified as an edeps complex. Hamlet 's Edips complex is the reason for his self - condemnation and disgust, and he finds expression for his stimulation of oppressed craving. Since Hamlet understood the duality between Claudius and himself, he could not kill Claudius himself. Therefore, Hamlet 's only solution was to die with Claudius. Jung's view that Hamlet is more than sexual desire
Hamlet 's father' s murder was not to prevent Hamlet from showing his desires, but to provide them with catalysts. Through unjust killing of Hamlet's old man by Claudius, Hamlet got the opportunity to grasp the mother's sexual orientation and his father's role. Hamlet can prove the legitimacy of the throne and Gertrude by insisting that he is retaliating against his father. Freud said that Claudius dominated Hamlet in the position of his father, but logically speaking, Hamlet should be taken action. Hamlet's only obstacle to the way to the throne is public opinion. Due to the belief that Hamlet has no advantage, he needs obvious evidence that Claudius is a crime of murder; otherwise it will be considered dangerous. Hamlet never began to be confused by the conflict with Claudius, but lacked evidence to support his argument, pretending not to file a lawsuit against Edianpes instinct.