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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... strange sights reaches its culmination. Awe-struck by people from a western world that she encounters literally for the first time, Miranda finds visions opening up beyond anything she has previously known. All her preconceptions are ...
... strange worlds in Renaissance drama, The Tempest has much the strangest. No other play creates a space which runs so entirely according to its own laws. The island setting – with its sharp boundaries, and magic that works here but ...
... strange fish' that may be 'marketable' at home (II.2.27, V.1.266) – potential good business. Even Prospero, whose magic invests him with control over life and death, has his power hedged around with a sense of its dangers and risks. He ...
... strange sights from the mid sixteenth century onwards. And the presentation of Caliban as a slave resonates even more strongly with the Americas. The transportation of black African slaves to Spanish and Portuguese colonies in Brazil ...
... strange' (I.2.400–401). Yet the form is not exactly optimistic, for there is often something arbitrary about romance reunions. The characters have not brought about their own happiness, nor is it always clear why they should be rewarded ...