Katrina Hapner � PAGE �1� Professor Mendel LITR 313 December 21‚ 2013 The Role of the Supernatural in "The Tempest" From the very start of Shakespeare ’s play‚ "The Tempest"‚ magic is used to mesmerize the audience. The entire plot of this play is very reliant on the supernatural. Prospero‚ Ariel‚ and Caliban all have magical powers. Magic lets these characters‚ mainly Prospero‚ manipulate the other characters and make them do their bidding. Magic also maneuvers the plot‚ relationships‚ love and
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Caliban Caliban is very instinctual and self centred Prospero rules Caliban through magic and threats‚ evident in their initial meeting where they insult each other. This changes a bit when Caliban meets Stephano and Trinculo and moves across and thinks that they might be equal with Prospero. He tries to ‘revolutionise’ on the island however he finds out at the end that Stephano isn’t a God and he is not even an equal with Prospero. (v.i.292-295) Caliban changes significantly according to the context
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sorts. An empire that still lives on through the many poems‚ sonnets and plays he wrote. Over the years‚ many of his plays‚ especially The Tempest (1610) have been reimagined and rewritten‚ allowing the play to keep up with the changing times. These adaptations either challenge‚ extend or reinforce Shakespeare’s work. One such adaptation is the film The Tempest (2010) by Julie Taymor. Julie Taymor‚ born on December 15‚ 1952‚ in Newton‚ Massachusetts‚ is an Academy Award-nominated playwright‚ designer
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What is the nature of Prospero and Miranda’s relationship? Discuss moments where Miranda seems to be entirely dependent on her father and moments where she seems independent. How does Miranda’s character change over the course of the play? At first‚ Miranda seems very young. When Prospero tells her of his exile from Italy‚ it is her passionate but also restless youth that the reader sees in her exclamations of concern (“O the heavens!” I.ii.116; “Alack‚ for pity!” I.ii.132). In this scene the reader
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Nature of Man In order to connect with his Christian dominated audience‚ all of Shakespeare’s plays contain important allusions to the bible. The Tempest is no exception. Throughout the play various allusions to the Genesis story of Adam & Eve are made. This serves to portray men in a state of nature which plants the question of whether men are intrinsically evil or good. In the play the island is described as a Utopia. This can be seen in Gonzalo’s speech in Act 2‚ Scene 1 “No kind of traffic
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Linda Lonseth Undermining the Otherness of Other: Caliban and Aaron Much of the representation of the ‘Other’ in The Tempest and Titus Andronicus aligns with the Early Modern dictum that women be chaste‚ silent and obedient (Hull 31‚ 173‚ 195). In the interests of maintaining the social order‚ those that exhibited basic differences in skin colour‚ nationality or cultural values would likely have been expected to remain in a subordinate position within the hierarchy by adhering to
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help us to learn more about the world we inhabit and ourselves. This journey requires the process of speculation and contemplation. In texts‚ the imaginative journey involves speculation from the composer as well as the responder or audience. “The Tempest” by William Shakespeare is a play which allows the audience to speculate and embark on an imaginative journey with the characters of the play in order to both entertain and enlighten them. Other imaginary texts such as “Ground
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The Power and Powerlessness of a Tempest First performed in 1611‚ The Tempest is Shakespeare’s final play. It explores traditional notions of power through rulers and subjects. By examining the relationship between the two‚ the piece challenges the simplicity of such titles. Through the construction of characters‚ and the interactions between‚ we can appreciate each ones’ possession of power‚ as well as their limitations. Prospero‚ both a subject and a ruler‚ exemplifies this. We can analyze this
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Rice University The Background of Divine Action in King Lear Author(s): Sandra Hole Reviewed work(s): Source: Studies in English Literature‚ 1500-1900‚ Vol. 8‚ No. 2‚ Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama (Spring‚ 1968)‚ pp. 217-233 Published by: Rice University Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/449656 . Accessed: 08/08/2012 05:45 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms
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of the past fear these creatures. As time progressed humans started to interpret and use the word monster in a different manner. In this essay I will be arguing that reader-response criticism is the best way to interpret William Shakespeare’s The Tempest by showing that we create the monsters. The best way to argue this play is to use the Toulmin model of argumentation. I think that Shakespeare argues that we create the monsters we fear and only we can
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