Alas, poor readers!
I don't buy it. Sure, there are similarities. When you write a 1079 page book designed to press people to think as well as to comment on the transience of life and the human condition, surely there will be some similarities between your work and one of Shakespeare's plays. I think there probably isn't a book worth reading that doesn't touch on at least ONE of Shakespeare's works. That's part of what is so awesome about Shakespeare... Everybody can appreciate them because the themes are universal. I remember cringing when I found out I had to read "Romeo and Juliet" in school when I was 12. As it turns out, there is quite a bit a 12-year-old can take from it.
I think the book that is more like Hamlet that IJ is the New Testament.
Father was a "king"? Check. Father is a ghost? Check. (Sorry. Couldn't resist.) Current "father" not really his father? Check. Secret plots to murder the protagonist? Uh, check. Discussing life, death and the possibility of life after death? Check. Banished? Check. (Hamlet to England, Jesus for a few days into heaven [or just the tomb, whichever way you see it.].) Dead bodies? Check. (True, Jesus brought them back to life...) Protagonist frequently misunderstood by other people? Check. Measured responses to slights, real or perceived? Check.
Surely there are things that IJ and Hamlet have in common, but I think the similarities are completely overstated. It's not a coincidence that the first two words of Hamlet are "Who's There?" and the first two words of IJ are "I am."? The phrase "Infinite Jest" coming directly from Hamlet? Allusions at best, copying at worst, similarities not at all. The first two words of Mario Puzo's "The Godfather" are "Amerigo Bonasera." Why no Godather-Hamlet comparisons?
Come to think of it, they may be more appropriate...
Thanks for letting me vent.
|