A woman and a man wave to people located in front of them.

US elections: here’s what’s at stake for Europe, in three key areas

Waya Quiviger, IE University

Syrian refugees in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon in 2013.

Europe is not prepared for the looming Lebanese refugee crisis

Barah Mikaïl, IE University

Why Europe should consider putting boots on the ground in Ukraine

Viktoriia Lapa, Bocconi University

Volodymyr Zelensky talking into a bank of microphones.

Talking to dead people through AI: the business of ‘digital resurrection’ might not be helpful, ethical… or even legal

Damián Tuset Varela, UOC - Universitat Oberta de Catalunya

Talking to dead people through AI: the business of ‘digital resurrection’ might not be helpful, ethical… or even legal

Do we need a European DARPA to cope with technological challenges in Europe?

David W. Versailles, PSB Paris School of Business and Valérie Mérindol, PSB Paris School of Business

Industrial site

How does REACH, the EU regulation governing chemical substances, work?

Johanna Berneron, Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire de l’alimentation, de l’environnement et du travail (Anses)

ghost of a woman playing piano

Why ghosts wear clothes or white sheets instead of appearing in the nude

Shane McCorristine, Newcastle University

Close up photo of a brown spider

Deadly spiders in Europe: How worried should we actually be?

Rick Visser, Universidad de Málaga

A shelf of Swedish children's books.

Sweden’s libraries caught in a political row about drag story hour

Lisa Magdalena Engström, Lund University; Fredrik Hanell, Linnaeus University, and Hanna Carlsson, Linnaeus University

We study how plants ‘feed’ themselves to find more sustainable ways to feed the planet

Javier Erro Garcés, Universidad de Navarra

We study how plants ‘feed’ themselves to find more sustainable ways to feed the planet

A new generation of telescopes will probe the ‘unknown unknowns’ that could transform our knowledge of the universe

Richard Massey, Durham University

ELT

The effects of binge drinking on teenagers’ brain development

Samuel Suárez Suárez, Universidad de Burgos and Jose Manuel Pérez García, UNIR - Universidad Internacional de La Rioja

Two young people sit on the floor leaning against each other, with three empty alcohol bottles next to them.

Female Nazi concentration camp guards: the true horror lies in their similarities to ourselves

Angharad Hampshire, York St John University

Six female SS guards from Belsen standing in a row scowling at the camera.

Scabies outbreak in UK universities – what you need to know

Michael Head, University of Southampton

Scabies outbreak in UK universities – what you need to know

Fall of Khrushchev: 60 years since the ‘most democratic coup’ in Soviet history, how Comrade Nikita was toppled

Tomas Sniegon, Lund University

Soviet leader NIkita Kruschev, left, with cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, centre, and Leonid Brezhnev, right.

Paris’s iconic Centre Pompidou: a cultural superstar facing economic and environmental challenges

Marie Ballarini, Université Paris Dauphine – PSL

Side view of Beaubourg and the roofs of Paris

Meet the microbes that transform toxic carbon monoxide into valuable biofuel

Maximilienne Toetie Allaart, University of Tübingen

close up of rod-shaped microbes on grey background from microscope

What causes burnout at work, and how can we prevent it?

Carlos Antonio Ferro Soto, Universidade de Vigo; Analía López-Carballeira, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, and M. Angeles Lopez Cabarcos, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela

Two people hugging on the street.

The political, social and psychological toll of family deaths in war

Diego Alburez-Gutierrez, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research and Enrique Acosta, Autonomous University of Barcelona

The Mazan rape trial in France: does literature, with its ‘sleeping beauties’, glorify rape?

Sandrine Aragon, Sorbonne Université

The Mazan rape trial in France: does literature, with its ‘sleeping beauties’, glorify rape?

Destruction of Gaza heritage sites aims to erase – and replace – Palestine’s history

Pilar Montero Vilar, Universidad Complutense de Madrid

Photograph of an archaeological site next to the sea

Vive L’impressionnisme! at the Van Gogh Museum: a compelling, eco-conscious celebration of impressionism

Frances Fowle, University of Edinburgh

Painting of a windmill in a field of tulips

European Union

Ursula von der Leyen

The European Union is becoming too obsessed with defence

Richard Youngs, University of Warwick

By failing to support migrant entrepreneurs, Europe is missing out on opportunities for economic growth

Daniela Bolzani, Università di Bologna; Rosana Silveira Reis, ISG International Business School, and Vittoria G. Scalera, University of Amsterdam

By failing to support migrant entrepreneurs, Europe is missing out on opportunities for economic growth

The modern world’s relationship to time is broken – and it’s fuelling the rise of the far right

Jesus Casquete, Universidad del País Vasco / Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea

The modern world’s relationship to time is broken – and it’s fuelling the rise of the far right

We polled EU citizens on what they want asylum policy to look like – their answers may surprise you

Natalia Letki, University of Warsaw; Dawid Walentek, Ghent University; Peter Thisted Dinesen, University of Copenhagen, and Ulf Liebe, University of Warwick

People on shore help pull a rubber dinghy full of people in life jackets from the ocean

The EU’s outsourced migration control is violent, expensive and ineffective

Refugee camp in Suruc, Turkey. 2015

Is your child stressed, restless, hyperactive? They might be suffering from sensory processing issues

Patricia Jovellar Isiegas, Universidad San Jorge

Israel has invaded Lebanon six times in the past 50 years – a timeline of events

Vanessa Newby, Leiden University

Two IDF soldiers look on as an Israeli tank manoeuvers at the Lebanese border.

Delirium: this common and frightening syndrome looks like dementia, but comes on much faster

Laura Zaurín Paniagua, Universidad San Jorge

Delirium: this common and frightening syndrome looks like dementia, but comes on much faster

Obstetric violence: abuse during childbirth is widespread, but the first step to fighting it is naming it

Patrizia Quattrocchi, Università degli Studi di Udine; Clémence Schantz, Institut de recherche pour le développement (IRD); Rodante van der Waal, Universiteit Voor Humanistiek; Stella Villarmea, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, and Virginie Rozée, Ined (Institut national d'études démographiques)

Obstetric violence: abuse during childbirth is widespread, but the first step to fighting it is naming it

Palliative and hospice care: why society cannot ignore the needs of terminally ill patients, and their loved ones

Vilma A. Tripodoro, Universidad de Navarra

Palliative and hospice care: why society cannot ignore the needs of terminally ill patients, and their loved ones

Sales jobs make people neurotic, but employers can protect workers’ health – just look at the construction industry

Selma Kadic-Maglajlic, Copenhagen Business School

Sales jobs make people neurotic, but employers can protect workers’ health – just look at the construction industry

How Covid-19 restrictions really impacted older people’s health across Europe

Jules Dupuy, Université Paris-Est Créteil Val de Marne (UPEC); Éric Defebvre, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, and Thomas Barnay, Université Paris-Est Créteil Val de Marne (UPEC)

How Covid-19 restrictions really impacted older people’s health across Europe

How to make meetings worthwhile and productive… for everyone involved

Francisco J. Pérez Latre, Universidad de Navarra

How to make meetings worthwhile and productive … for everyone involved

Does psilocybin really provide long-term relief from depression, as new study suggests?

Johan Lundberg, Karolinska Institutet and Guusje Haver, Karolinska Institutet

Psilocybe cubensis growing on a substrate.

Small populations of Stone Age people drove dwarf hippos and elephants to extinction on Cyprus

Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Flinders University; Christian Reepmeyer, Deutsches Archäologisches Institut - German Archaeological Institute, and Theodora Moutsiou, University of Cyprus

A small hippo with baby among rocks and grass.

How ice, trees, coral and sediments help us reconstruct 2.6 million years of climate history: an introduction to paleoclimatology

Armand Hernández, Universidade da Coruña and Olga Margalef, Universitat de Barcelona

The inside of an ice cave

Eco-anxiety Q&A: how the IPCC’s vice-chair keeps her head cool on a warming planet

Diána Ürge-Vorsatz, Central European University

Eco-anxiety Q&A: how the IPCC’s vice-chair keeps her head cool on a warming planet

Glue in the face: how frogs’ sticky secretions defend them from attack

Shabnam Zaman, Vrije Universiteit Brussel

A small, orange frog sits on the grouns

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Childhood diabetes cases have risen sharply over the last 30 years in Europe, but some countries are affected more than others – new study

Childhood diabetes cases have risen sharply over the last 30 years in Europe, but some countries are affected more than others – new study

Marta Carolina Ruiz Grao, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha; Ana Díez-Fernández, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, and Miriam Garrido Miguel, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha

Poor indoor air quality isn’t just making us sick – it’s also polluting our cities

César Martín-Gómez, Universidad de Navarra and Arturo H. Ariño, Universidad de Navarra

Poor indoor air quality isn’t just making us sick – it’s also polluting our cities

What makes an artist great? 5 reasons why the likes of Goya, Frida Kahlo and Da Vinci are still revered today

Pablo Alvarez de Toledo Müller, Universidad Nebrija

Vistors at the Prado Museum in Madrid look at Velázquez's painting 'Las Meninas'.

The best exercises to boost your brain health after 60

Neva Béraud-Peigné, Université Paris-Saclay; Alexandra Perrot, Université Paris-Saclay, and Pauline Maillot, Université Paris Cité

Des seniors en tenue de sport font une course sur le bitume.

How to make schools inclusive and safe for everyone, in 8 steps

Pedro Adalid Ruíz, Universidad CEU San Pablo

How to make schools inclusive and safe for everyone, in 8 steps

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Why ghosts wear clothes or white sheets instead of appearing in the nude

Eating quickly saves time, but it takes a toll on your health – here’s how

Esther Martínez Miguel, Universidad Nebrija and Silvia Gómez Senent, Universidad Nebrija

Eating quickly saves time, but it takes a toll on your health – here’s how

Neanderthal remains found in France reveals there were not one, but at least two lineages of late Neanderthals in Europe

Ludovic Slimak, Université de Toulouse III – Paul Sabatier

Neanderthal remains found in France reveals there were not one, but at least two lineages of late Neanderthals in Europe

5.5 million years ago the Mediterranean dried out, with sobering lessons for humanity today – new research

Daniel García-Castellanos, Instituto de Geociencias de Barcelona (Geo3Bcn – CSIC) and Konstantina Agiadi, Universität Wien

From rhino horn snuff to pangolin livestock feed: we analysed half a century of patents to track the wildlife trade’s evolution

Amy Hinsley, University of Oxford and Susanne Masters, Leiden University

horseshoe crabs on sandy beach, sea in background

Why every island’s wildlife ends up looking alike

Céline Bellard, Université Paris-Saclay and Clara Marino, Université Paris-Saclay

Why every island’s wildlife ends up looking alike

DNA reveals secrets of cave-dwelling medieval community that survived conquest and epidemics

Anders Götherström, Stockholm University and Ricardo Rodriguez Varela, Stockholm University

Las Gobas

The overshoot myth: you can’t keep burning fossil fuels and expect scientists of the future to get us back to 1.5°C

James Dyke, University of Exeter; Robert Watson, University of East Anglia, and Wolfgang Knorr, Lund University

Melting glacier splashes into the sea

Alexander von Humboldt: the groundbreaking naturalist who bankrupted himself to share his life’s work

Bienvenido León, Universidad de Navarra

Painting of two men camping, with large mountains in the distance

Plant disease could spell apocalypse for citrus fruits

Raphael Morillon, Cirad; Barbara Hufnagel, Cirad; Patrick Ollitrault, Cirad, and Virginie Ravigné, Cirad

Plant disease could spell apocalypse for citrus fruits

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IMAGES

  1. Hamlet essay

    hamlet as a villain essay

  2. Themes in Hamlet

    hamlet as a villain essay

  3. Hamlet: Tragic Hero, Indecisive Villain

    hamlet as a villain essay

  4. Hamlet Essay Assignment

    hamlet as a villain essay

  5. Did Shakespeare intend Shylock to be portrayed as a victim, or as a

    hamlet as a villain essay

  6. Who is the Villain in Shakespeare's Hamlet?

    hamlet as a villain essay

VIDEO

  1. Hamlet by William Shakespeare

  2. Hamlet by William Shakespeare

  3. Hamlet by William Shakespeare

  4. Hamlet by William Shakespeare

  5. Hamlet by William Shakespeare

  6. Hamlet by William Shakespeare

COMMENTS

  1. Hamlet

    Hamlet feigned madness, manipulated Ophelia and others, insulted his mother, and Hamlet restrained himself from taking proper action. Instead of taking immediate retribution and punishing the murder of his father, Hamlet is simply scheming about in a dishonorable way.

  2. Hamlet is Shakespeare’s greatest villain

    In short, Hamlet is a self-centred, entitled, manipulative, callous bully. However, he is also intensely charismatic, so much so that he has persuaded the world to share his...

  3. Essays on Hamlet

    Readers see King Hamlet as a pre-modern villain, King Claudius as a modern villain, and Prince Hamlet as a post-modern villain. Hamlet’s feigned madness becomes a window into failed …

  4. Hamlet Villain Essay

    Throughout Hamlet, Prince Hamlet is faced against many situations that question his mental stability and ability to make decisions. His indecisiveness comes from the way he reacts to the …

  5. Hamlet

    Hamlet comes across as both a hero and a villain throughout ‘Hamlet’ at different intervals. His loyalty, morality, honesty and popularity are certainly heroic traits however one …

  6. Hamlet's Villain

    Hamlet's Villain. 615 Words3 Pages. In Hamlet, one word that puts an emphasis on evil is “villain.” The word is often used to portray feelings and to cast a sort of evil upon certain …

  7. Hamlet: From Good To Evil

    In Hamlet, from William Shakespeare, Prince Hamlet plays the main character and as well the hero of the story. Hamlet decides to end the marriage of Claudius, the new king/evil …

  8. Who is the Villain in Shakespeare's Hamlet?

    The main villain in Shakespeare’s Hamlet is Claudius, the brother of the deceased King Hamlet and the current king. What motivates the villain in Hamlet? The villain, Claudius, is motivated by a desire for power, which leads …