The TempestPan Macmillan, 13.06.2019 - 160 Seiten The Tempest is Shakespeare's masterpiece of magical effects, redemptive romance, poetry and politics. |
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... nature itself. Finding that his enemies are in the vicinity, he uses his magical powers to shipwreck them; frightened and bewildered, they wander about the island while Prospero unleashes on them all the resources of the spirits he has ...
... nature and nurture; in the 19th as a metaphor of the theatre and its illusions, more explicitly as an autobiographical play with Prospero standing for Shakespeare himself; in the 20th and early 21st centuries the play has often been ...
... nature took many different forms from those known to the European mind, so scientists were probing the ways in which the universe worked. Everything seemed possible: When we were boys, as Gonzalo says in Act II, scene II: Who would ...
... nature. Miranda of course knows all about her father's work on the secret texts, and the powers those studies have conferred on him; to her it is entirely normal. What comes as a great shock to her is the story her father, with barely ...
... nature of the theatre, fraternal treachery, interference with natural processes, to name a very few. But I have chosen to look at the narrative, the backbone of the play, asking the time-honoured and indispensable question, what ...