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Fathers Role: Child-rearing practices seem to stem as much or more from the personalities of the parents as from the prevailing tendencies in the culture. For example, the personalities of fathers role who were restrictive in their attitude toward their children showed more than average constriction, sub-missiveness, and suggestibility, and less than average self-assurance; whereas the more permissive group of fathers role were more self-reliant and competent (14,1955).
Modern structural and stylistic criticism is more concerned with examining such things as the similarities and contrasts, the interrelationships and role-playing modes among the four sons of murdered fathers role (Hamlet, Laertes, Fortinbras, and Pyrrhus) or the four women (Gertrude, Ophelia, the Player Queen, and Hecuba) whose actions are seen or described in the play, than to highlight the Prince at the expense of the complexity of the action. |
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