The TempestPenguin UK, 29.10.2015 - 240 Seiten 'The magic in The Tempest is real ... It contains a great many unanswered questions' Margaret Atwood |
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... Caliban is a creature made completely from Shakespeare's imagination, compounded of many different species and fitting into no single category of animal or mankind. These figures call into question the lines by which human identity is ...
... Caliban's dream, which tantalizes him with riches and leaves him weeping when they vanish at his awakening (III.2.140–44), encapsulates this mood of frustrated longing. The culmination of this strain is the miniature masque which the ...
... Caliban tells us that his mother worshipped a god called Setebos (I.2.373, V.1.261), but this was a name from South America, which Shakespeare found in narratives of discovery in Patagonia. Gonzalo's fantasy of a utopian state.
... Caliban home and exhibit him for money recalls the many New World natives who were brought back to Europe as strange sights from the mid sixteenth century onwards. And the presentation of Caliban as a slave resonates even more strongly ...
... Caliban (1964) the French social scientist Octave Mannoni took the main characters as symbols for what he thought was the psychology of colonialism he had observed in Madagascar. In Highlife for Caliban (1995), the Sierra Leonean poet ...