IJFANS International Journal of Food and Nutritional Sciences

ISSN PRINT 2319 1775 Online 2320-7876

A Technical Study of Deeds and Actualization in Hamlet and the Bhagavad Gita

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Yeshaswani T

Abstract

Literature is not constrained by time, geography, or borders. Each country's ideology is universal. This essay concentrates on the karma concept presented in The Bhagavad Gita and later discovered in Shakespeare's play Hamlet. The need for a comparison study may not be evident for all the right reasons, but I did notice how closely these two works are related. It is more than just a result; it is a connection between two very different civilizations. Hamlet, the son of the Danish king, and Arjuna, the son of Indra, the ruler of the gods, are both princes. Even if these two individuals represent the culture of their genre, it is necessary to think of them as representing their entire society rather than just one particular figure. Both protagonists are put in positions where they must murder family members and decide whether to act out of retaliation or out of a sense of dharma

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