Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Miranda's sexuality in The Tempest
Whitney Starks
"Lear's Shadow" and "Nothing"
“Lears shadow” (1.4.206) is a spondee with a feminine accent. The feminine ending is a signal for alarm, as Lear’s shadow follows a stressed-stressed-unstressed meter. The use of a feminine ending to signal alarm is an act of misogyny. It’s bad enough that women are represented in Shakespeare's plays only to the extent that female characters are played by male actors. So, the use of the feminine ending to evoke alarm and a sense of eeriness emphasizes that Shakespeare’s world of 16th/17th century literature is a boy world--a world in which women are not allowed to exist beyond the costumes and disguises worn by male actors who mimic femininity. Shakespeare’s boy world or the theatre, as it’s called, is a microcosm for 16th/17th century, English society. The exclusion of women from the theatre parallels the haunting presence of misogyny in 16th/17th century English culture.
Anti-woman ideals appear in the language of Shakespeare's day. “Nothing” (1.2.126) is the term that refers to female genitalia as it is used in Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra. The genitals of man and woman are that which defines man from woman. The use of the word nothing to refer to female genitalia is an implication that in Shakespeare’s society women are perceived to be exactly that which defines them--nothing. In contrast, men as the victors, the dominant members of society are defined by their genitals, as are women. The difference, however, is the word used to define the male genital. This word is “cause” (1.2.127) as it too is used in Antony and Cleopatra. In contrast to the word nothing, the word cause implies existence and value. In its use in Antony and Cleopatra, the word “great” (1.2.127)precedes the word cause to signify the importance of male genitalia and--by extension--the importance of men in Shakespeare’s society.
Beata Ingabire
Section 1D Waldo
Monday, December 8, 2008
Chaos in King Lear
Prelapsarian- characteristic of the time or state before the fall of human kind in the Bible
after the fall the notion was that we age, we feel pain, and we die
This idea appears in the world of King Lear as it is representative of Shakes' England. The plays succession of terrible events suggests the universe does not operate in an eye for an eye manner (Lex talionis) --there is no regulation. The play being situation in the midst of a storm underscores this notion.
The fool's soliloquy at the end of act 3.2 speaks of the constant chaos in the world and the worlds inability to return to a state of tranquility.
The fact that "King Lear" is based in a time before the fall suggests that the world died a long time ago, and that great tragedy has been dead. Shakes is touching on the danger of nostalgia over the epic culture which does not exist in "King Lear" so therefore does not exist in his England.
maija sjogren
waldo
Background Behind Coriolanus
Cecilia Luppi
Waldo Section 1D
Black Friars Identification
Josephine Lee
Ian Hoch
Black Friars was a theatre in the Blackfriars district in London during the Renaissance. The name Blackfriars originated from the original owners, Dominican Friars. In 1608, Shakespeare and his company "King's Men" took ownership of the theatre. An enclosed, small theater, the theater was usually used in the winter while the Globe was used in the Summer. Unlike the public open amphitheatres theatres like the Globe, Black Friars served as a private theatre, catering to the wealthy. Shakespeare used the theatre until 1642 when all theatres closed due to the English Civil War. BY 1655, the theatre was demolished
Black Friars Identification
Metatheatre
An example Professor Little provided:
When we are born we cry because we have come to this grand stage/world of fools
Robert Lopez
Amanda Waldo 1A
Machiavel
Examples for the Machiavel include Iago from Othello and Edmund from King Lear.
Brian Dowler
Amanda Waldo 1A
-Vanessa Labi
Spontaneous Generation
Other concepts that fit into this idea of masculine sterility are the root meaning of the word nothing which originally referred to a "woman's reproductive organs" and the original meaning of orgasm which mean "death." Both these concepts attribute sexuality with producing death implying a perversion of reproduction.
Heather Farley-Rushworth
Section 1A
"Ekphrasis"
Sunday, December 7, 2008
the 2 bodies of King Lear
-spiritual body: which comes from God
-physical body
With both of his bodies King Lear is dying before his time, because he is giving away his kingdom before his death.
M.Sandoval
section 1d
Absolutism and the Idea of a Family Unit in King Lear
Xian Yan Liu, Section 1D Amanda Waldo
Blood Tragedy
Jennifer Barnum
"Peace, Peace. Dost Thou not see my baby ..."
Cleopatra: "Peace, peace. // Dost thou not see my baby at my breast,//That sucks the nurse asleep?"
Very grotesque imagery.
-Andres Barajas
discussion 1b
Civitas vs. Virtus
Virtus was related to the masculine ideals of manliness/war and courage which Antony is idealized for. This is also a reflection upon Rome itself.
The philosphy of civitas relateds to peaceful civility (behaving civilized) and is associated with Egypt and also Cleopatra.
Cesar believes that Antony originally had too much Virtus to be beneficial for Rome, but after going to Egypt he believes that he has developed too much civitas.
In lecture Prof. Little said that these differences lead to 2 problems
1. A problem develops for Cesar and Philo. because Egypt has too much civitas. He is hoping to overtake the Egyptians but this is complicated if his culture is one of virtus and the other is the civilized, peaceful state.
2. There are two Romes depicted one Rome, as represented by Antony and the other represented by Cesar. Cesar believes that Rome wants to exist in one extreme of virtus or civitas, but he believes that the best nation will develop as a balance of these two characteristics. As such Antony and Cleopatra both represent a threat to the nation he hopes to create.
Cleopatra and Elizabeth
The correlation could be seen as unfavorable because of Shakespeare’s stance on Egypt as a whole: Cleopatra represents Egypt, and Egypt represents the epitome of civitas. Egypt is the home of excess materialism, of partying on Cleopatra’s barge, and feasting and drinking all night. Had the play been written while Elizabeth ruled, the obvious (though not necessarily correct) assumption would have been that England was the new home of civitas. Shakespeare would have had to write the play differently had he written it earlier, but the fact that he steered clear of Cleopatra altogether speaks volumes of his sense of timing.
Zack Balthaser
Waldo, Dis 1A
Theatre of Cruelty
the audience gets to the point that we think of the actors in real time, thinking about the actors as if the physicality of the theatre is real. we can feel his pain. an elderly actor is used to portray Lear. he has to memorize a lot of lines, and screams alot -- the actor is exhausted, pushing limits of theatre & actor alike
April Yuan
utopia
Dystopia - "Brave New Word", means nightmare place.
In the Tempest, are we talking about utopia or dystopia? One person's utopia is another's dystopia, and vice cersa.
April Yuan
Dominant Female Characters
Lady Macbeth is another dominant character. She takes charge and manipulates Macbeth underlining her ultimate power. She wants to stop her female biology, wants to stop her blood flow. She is linked to the three witches and resides in the same standing as them. Ultimately, the lay is tragic for both Lady Macbeth & Macbeth. She realizes that her tragedy is not the guilt of murder but her "unsex" moment did not work-she thought her ultimate power would work. The blood on her hands is female blood and she realizes that she is female-her guilt comes from being a woman! Act 1. Scene 5 highlights her femininity. As she reads the letter from Macbeth, this is the first time that she speaks in the play, but she is not actually speaking her own words-they are Macbeth's words, a man, which underscores the fact that she is just a woman. Her power does not come from within, rather it is due to the male figure of Macbeth that she hides behind.
Obviously, there are more characters, like Cleopatra and the daughters of King Lear, Regan & Goneril, that can also be placed in this category but, Volumnia & Lady Macbeth are two of my favorite overly masculine women!
Danielle Moyer
Discussion 1C-Aaron Gorelik
Saturday, December 6, 2008
Chaos and Authority in King Lear
Deanna Ashikyan
English 142B
Aaron Gorelik (Thur 5- 5:50)
Blood Tragedies
Blood tragedies are a variation of the Revenge Tragedy that was popular during the Elizabethan era. These plays catered towards the more morbid infatuations of the populace, who were used to being entertained by such spectacles as bear baitings and public executions, and commonly showed the onstage 'deaths' and mutilations of obscene amounts of characters in order to satiate their audience (Little mentioned particular plays showing 200 people die during their course). Though Shakespeare had during one period written blood tragedies himself, a decent example being Titus Andronicus, King Lear can be seen as his attempt to break away from and possibly criticize that mold, as he pointedly fails to show to the audience the deaths of important characters such as Cordelia and her sisters, only to mention them after the fact.
Brian Dowler
Waldo Section 1A
Background to Coriolanus
Around 509 B.C., The Etruscans were in charge of Rome. At that time, Lucius Tarquinius Superbus was in power and his son Sextus Tarquinius (Tarquin) raped the Roman noblewoman Lucrece. She told her brother, Lucius Junius Brutus, who raped her and she killed herself. They put her body in display and talked about how she was raped. The Romans, led by Brutus, rose up against the tyrants and founded the Roman Republic. Coriolanus was one of the heroes that overthrew the tyrants. The Play also focuses on the forgotten story of Lucrece but Shakespeare brings it back.
Irvin Liu
Discussion 1E
Crisis of Iconography
Heather Finch
Theme of Cannibalism in "Coriolanus"
Menenius offers us a moderate view of the hostilities between these estates of the commoners and aristocracy when he tells the belly fable. Here, he describes Rome as a body in which the Senate is the belly that nourishes the limbs, like the commoners. Yet we see Menenius offer us his private insight about the plebeians’ relationship with the aristocratic Marcius when tells Brutus and Sicinius “Ay, to devour him, as the hungry plebeians would the noble Marcius” (2.1. 9-10). Ultimately, we see Marcius as the pharmakos of this social conflict when he is murdered at the play’s end. While it is not the plebeians that eliminate Marcius here, they contribute to his demise. Just as Marcius saves many Roman plebeians from elimination when he stops his Volsican army from waging war on Rome, it is ironically Marcius’ refusal to wage war that leads to his demise; war does not consume Marcius, peace does.
Matt Sigel, Waldo (Section A)
Emasculation in Coriolanus
Kevin Yee
Section 1D
Amanda Waldo
Music of Spheres
Gwynne Standfield
Section 1A
Waldo
Spectacular Theatre/1608 Food Riots
Spectacular Theatre -
... in any case, there is a role for theater to play (Tragedy of Coriolanus); particularly focusing on the auditory experience… what happens to theatre as we move into the early 17th century is in some ways the birth of theater that is more spectacular, a theater driven by spectacle… as contrasted to a theater driven by the auditory… the play is THEN critiquing this shift of plays from the AUDITORY AND THE SUBSTANTIAL to the SPECTACULAR AND INSUBSTANTIAL… he maps this out through Coriolanus and the poplulous and how they want to participate in this spectacular culture, a theater driven by show and tell… thus, starts to come a much more impotent form of theater itself… We see Shakespeare pushing the play against what the populous wants in this play, events come to us choral form; little is actually seen… much is taking place in story telling… one of the biggest moments of this is when Coriolanus still named Martius goes to the gates of the city and they shut the gates of the city off… people are killed off stage… we don’t get to see this big action scene in the play. We see Shakespeare getting into King Lear, all characters die off-stage except for King Lear… thus, we see him taking it step up… lets stage the barge scene but now show it… talk about it… then, take it up a notch… then to Coriolanus where we show nothing… the audience experiences this feeling of literally being shut up… instead what we keep getting is a play that keeps turning to the use of the chorus… underscoring the sense of the theatrical, Rome will not be turned into a spectacle… we don’t see his wounds, we don’t see him as an action hero; thus, the play by denying us access to spectacle… the play is critiquing our desire for it! What we see in that is this shift of theater itself from being far more substantial to some that entertains us and provides us with visual sport… cheapening of the power of theater itself… it’s highlighting that shift…
The play critiques the populous… by demanding spectacle, we are denying ourselves food… there is substantial social and political role theatre more play… the more we demand spectacle the more undermine the power inherent in auditory theater.
There is this sense of CONFUSION, it is not simply that people want the spectacle, it is what we have done to theater and the art of story telling… story telling and listening is a form of empowerment and the fact that theater is becoming a spectacular sport, this is quite dangerous.
Big pint here is the play can be thought about as rescuing the theater from the spectacular… Coriolanus gets banished from Rome and turns around bands Rome from himself, Coriolanus reminds James I of Basilikon Doran as he talks about himself as a little god..
Food Riots of 1608
One of the notions of senate is that men share power equally, Coriolanus does nothing on equal terms with other figures around him. How does Rome produce such a strong character like Coriolanus and then how do they assimilate him into the civic fold?
One of the issues that was referenced last time was the issue of the MID-LANDS… one of the approaches to this play is to think of it as a response to what was happening in the MID-LANDS… food riots of 1608 outside of Stratford, what happened in those riots was essentially what happened in the play itself… the gentry to negotiate the price of corn were holding back food, thus, the general population endured much starvation… the riots were to force the gentry to turn over the corn and stop manipulating the food supply for economic aid… then we have the people uprising… exactly what happens in the play.
Here… we must think of the play as Shakespeare’s response to the food riots, then it raises questions of theatricality in the play… it raises a serious question of ‘what is the role of theater in relation to these food riots…’ If we take Shakespeare to be on the side or against the riots, Little suggests Shakespeare is supporting the people and not the gentry. What is the role that theatre can play and does play in relation to starvation and rioting… of what use, politically, socially is theater…. When we are speaking about issues of rioting and starvation… Shakespeare’s argues then that theater comes across an impotent, that is doesn’t have a serious contribution to make… we can see this played out in the beginning of the play when the straving people come in and Menninius decides to tell them a story… What is the relationship between story telling and food, can we feed the masses with theater, or if we talk about theater as a kind of food or nourishment ten what is its relationship to food? One of the critiques here, not what happens with the Plebians in the beginning; they hear the story… Menninius substitutes story-telling for food, then as we go on… the story moves on to the body of Coriolanus… we move from the auditory, a shift from listening and speaking to showing.. this comes particularly in the form of Coriolanus…
What everyone wants Coriolanus to do is to show his wounds… to put his wounds on display which Coriolanus is refusing to do, something very feminizing about that whole process… talk about the terms in terms of immasculization… If we are starving as people are in the play and the Mid-Lands there is potentially a role for theater to play because it not only there for entertainment but it maybe even more so there as part of instruction and part of the socio-political process… this is why theater was so regulated in Shakespeare’s day…
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Still don't have 'Blood Tragedies' in my notes... anyone else have this?! If so, please post!!!
James Steel
Dis 1D
Utopia vs Dystopia, Montaigne and Scenes to Attend to in The Tempest
The Tempest is also referred to as Shakespeare’s American play in part inspired by notions of groups of colonists coming over on ships coming over to populate colonies set up by England and the ships wrecked and one of the coasts ended up off the coast of Bermuda… The colonists were reported to have found this magic, lush place and stayed there for 9 months or so (found it to be paradise-like) and then found their way back to England and re-told the tale. One of the biggest questions we must ask in question of the legitimacy of these sort of tales of utopia and of utopias in general, if these individuals were in such a paradise; then why did they bother to come back?!
This is argued to Shakespeare’s most political play, thinking of absolutist authority and ideas of oppression and cultural sensitivity… notions of establishing utopias and finding ourselves in dystopias…
Act 2.1 → Moment when Antonio, Gonzalo and all the rest of them are all sitting around chatting… we see here the repetition of all the brother characters here, they want to basically kill each other off as they fight for some kind of supremacy… we remember one the reason we are on this island is because Prospero like James I, got very much caught up in his magic…. In some ways what we see is Prospero is on the island b/c he was practicing all this magic, when he gets there on the island; he just does all of absolutist stuff on the island and practice his study on how to carry out acts of revenge… the world that we are in however, as much we see it as a utopia, we cannot hide from the dystopic undercurrents… the other part of this in terms of Shakespeare nodding to some kind of global tradition, now we have the king here married his daughter to some black African guy sending him across the world and now they’re done... this is certainly a notion that has been and may be addressed further by critics in terms of what Shakespeare meant to say by including this detail...
Gonzalo decides that this island could be a place they could live for a long time… UTOPIA means NO PLACE… we have characters that go off to utopia and then they come back and tell the stores of how wonderful their time was, then the problem always seems to be… THEN WHY DID YOU LEAVE?
Why does he give up his magic? He has all he wanted, IT WAS ALL FOR POWER! He wants to go back and rule, that is his whole prerogative… NO CHARACTERS EVER CONTROL SHAKESPEARE’S PLAYS… the plays belong to no characters… a big DISILLUSIONMENT for Shakespeare is that even for him is… IT IS NOT HIS PLAY…
Act 2.1 (Line 150) – “In the commonwealth…” → Gonzalo is describing all of his views of utopia… then Sebastian adds in… “yet he would be king on it…” We get the sense that somebody has to in charge of the utopian vision, it doesn’t just happen! The governing word here is no ('ut'), which is ultimately a no place… we get a utopia not by putting in content but taking out content, we wont ‘t have this or that., etc… We see this in the Declaration of Independence, many notions of taking things away; a declaration of no dependence… we will emerge as a utopian fantasy nation of no dependence… On the other side of this we see how heavily policed the idea of a utopia is…! FINE LINE BETWEEEN UTOPIAN CULTURE AND A OPRESSIVE ONE…
Part of the lines of this quote are taken almost word for word from a French essayist in the west named MICHEL MOTAIGNE in an essay of his called “OF THE CANNIBALS.” His essays were translated into English by JOHN FLORIO in 1603…
In this essay of the Cannibals… Montaigne writes that there is nothing about the American Indians that is barbarous or savage, we have no other aim of truth or reason that the culture/customs from the culture in which we live in… What he is arguing is the following: In the sense that when we have trees that naturally produce fruit that are unaltered, then we have fruit and food produced artificially, we are altering nature… the things that occur naturally in nature are perfect for him… the bigger point he is making is that when we go to the Americas, what we do is we see cultures that don’t have our customs: we see those and we call those cultures barbaric, where in fact, we are the barbarians because we have gone and don’t recognize ourselves therefore, we call them uncivilized… Every culture in itself is netural zone, it is not good or bad within himself…
When Gonzalo speaks and offers his utopian vision is from a essay calling into question of having these utopian desires, there is something that becomes chilling for others for Shakespeare about telling others how they should live, this is barbarism….
THE CONTRAST for this comes from Caliban… when he is talking to Stefano and Trinculo, this is when they hear the music on the island (Act 3.2)… then Caliban says in some of the most beautiful language we find in Shakesepeare, one of the most profound notions in Shakespeare; what is the nature of savegry?! What is that really underscores the savagery of Caliban, it is ultimately a savagery that not only Caliban lays claim to, but also Shakespeare HIMSELF…
“Be not afeard. The isle is full of noises,
Sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices
That, if I then had waked after long sleep
Will make me sleep again; and then in dreaming
The clouds methought would open and show riches
Ready to drop upon me, that when I waked
I cried to dream again. ” (III,ii,130)
To translate this for us: What Caliban says here in contrast to Gonzalo’s speech which called for policing and increasing regulation is no… in fact, what you do is stop talking and start to listen… it isn’t ultimately about manipulating and regulating… this brings Shakespeare to the end of his career, he realizes he has been regulating and manipulating… he sees we need not impose our will on the universe, but listen to it…
Dis 1D
Amanda Waldo
Friday, December 5, 2008
There be some sports are painful... (The Tempest)
Delight in them sets off. Some kinds of baseness
Are nobly undergone, and most poor matters
Point to rich ends. This my mean task
Would be as heavy to me as odious, but
The mistress which I serve quickens what’s dead
And makes my labours pleasures."
(III.i.1 - III.i.7)
In this passage at the opening of III.i, Ferdinand is speaking in monologue, explaining that he is accepting of the ridiculous work tasks that Prospero has created for him, because of Miranda's love. This passage suggests that Ferdinand believes that everything happens for a reason, or "for the best," which is an ironic sentiment in this specific context, since he is being freely manipulated by Prospero despite Prospero's approval of him; it is also an ironic sentiment in the larger scheme of the play, since all things on the island, in the play, and "on the globe" are suggested to be illusory. The scene of Ferdinand and the logs also ties in with a common theme of punishment and exchange throughout the play, in which sacrifice for many of the characters is necessary to claim/reclaim their "reward"/status/freedom.
Stephanie Solis
Ian Hoch, 1B
King Lear ID - Apostrophe
Call out upson Mytrical force (GODS HEAVENS) Jupiter, Jove Line 220 (2.4)
When Lear 1st does this it is grand because he is King Lear but by Act 2.4 it ends as an underscore scene of the empty theater.
All grandeo is not about calling on God because infact they are not there. Theater packed with gods, etc is an empty space.
Sententiousness: empty feels good.
Lear who's been in charge disinegrates infront of us. We have reached end of emotionality. There is no where else for him to go. (Line 259) 2.4
Christina Salinas (Chris)
Prospero acknowledges Caliban
Professor Little called attention to how The Tempest's name is based on something which we assume is natural, but turns out to be artifice. Here Shakespeare is pushing the limits of theater by exploding the illusion it creates. Theater that draws the audience in is, in The Tempest, then revealed to be a simple series of tricks by a conjurer like Prospero, simply for his own betterment (or PROSPERity). It is as if, at the end of his career, Shakespeare is telling his audience look and see how he has so simply tricked them into believing his plays so he could make a profit.
However, it goes much deeper when we think about the desire of human beings to break through the artifice to something real. Despite the flat characters which can be so easily fabricated that fill up this play, there's a complex and serious backstory which is pointedly ignored. We learn that Prospero killed Sycorax, then enslaved her son, Caliban, we learn of this complicated treaty that Prospero's brother worked out as a result of his taking the throne from the uninterested Prospero, and these would normally make us question the morality of Prospero's retaking the throne. However, the flow of the play will not allow this question to come up, making a point of how the play must conform to the illogical desires of the audience.
Max Porter Zasada
TA Ian Hoch
King lear themes as a model to thematically studying all the plays. . .
King Lear-
Justice
(consider which figure in the play should represent justice and who actually does represent it. To what extent does he or she and to what extent doesn't he or she represent justice? consider also, how and why readers get and expect justice to come about. How does King lear's justice tie into justice in another play?)
King Lear is a brutal play, filled with human cruelty and awful, seemingly meaningless disasters. The play’s succession of terrible events raises an obvious question for the characters—namely, whether there is any possibility of justice in the world, or whether the world is fundamentally indifferent or even hostile to humankind. Various characters offer their opinions: “As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods; / They kill us for their sport,” Gloucester muses, realizing it foolish for humankind to assume that the natural world works in parallel with socially or morally convenient notions of justice (IV.i.37–38). Edgar, on the other hand, insists that “the gods are just,” believing that individuals get what they deserve (V.iii.169). But, in the end, we are left with only a terrifying uncertainty—although the wicked die, the good die along with them, culminating in the awful image of Lear cradling Cordelia’s body in his arms. There is goodness in the world of the play, but there is also madness and death, and it is difficult to tell which triumphs in the end.
Authority versus Chaos
(How does the play define these terms? Is chaos the appropriate term here or is what happens in the play Authority redefined? Compare the relationship between Authority and Chaos in King Lear with authority and Chaos in the other plays. What does this conflict (since it says "versus") suggest about Shakespeare's plays overall since they were written during the Jacobean era?)
King Lear is about political authority as much as it is about family dynamics. Lear is not only a father but also a king, and when he gives away his authority to the unworthy and evil Goneril and Regan, he delivers not only himself and his family but all of Britain into chaos and cruelty. As the two wicked sisters indulge their appetite for power and Edmund begins his own ascension, the kingdom descends into civil strife, and we realize that Lear has destroyed not only his own authority but all authority in Britain. The stable, hierarchal order that Lear initially represents falls apart and disorder engulfs the realm.
The failure of authority in the face of chaos recurs in Lear’s wanderings on the heath during the storm. Witnessing the powerful forces of the natural world, Lear comes to understand that he, like the rest of humankind, is insignificant in the world. This realization proves much more important than the realization of his loss of political control, as it compels him to reprioritize his values and become humble and caring. With this newfound understanding of himself, Lear hopes to be able to confront the chaos in the political realm as well.
Reconciliation
(Again, is this the proper word for what happens in Lear? What are some synonyms for reconciliation that seem to get closer to the truth? What is at stake in the play if reconciliation does not occur, or for that matter, if it does? How does reconciliation in lear prefigure reconciliation in the other plays we read? What is shakespeare implying with how he uses or does not use reconciliation?)
Darkness and unhappiness pervade King Lear, and the devastating Act V represents one of the most tragic endings in all of literature. Nevertheless, the play presents the central relationship—that between Lear and Cordelia—as a dramatic embodiment of true, self-sacrificing love. Rather than despising Lear for banishing her, Cordelia remains devoted, even from afar, and eventually brings an army from a foreign country to rescue him from his tormentors. Lear, meanwhile, learns a tremendously cruel lesson in humility and eventually reaches the point where he can reunite joyfully with Cordelia and experience the balm of her forgiving love. Lear’s recognition of the error of his ways is an ingredient vital to reconciliation with Cordelia, not because Cordelia feels wronged by him but because he has understood the sincerity and depth of her love for him. His maturation enables him to bring Cordelia back into his good graces, a testament to love’s ability to flourish, even if only fleetingly, amid the horror and chaos that engulf the rest of the play.
Good Luck everyone!
King Lear
(3.2 13-24)
Rumble thy bellyful; spit fire; spout rain.
Nor rain, wind thunder, fire are my daughters
I tax not you, you elements, with unkindness.
I never gave my kingdom, called you children.
You owe me no subscription. Then let fall
Your horrible pleasure. Here I stand your slave,
A poor, infirm, weak and despised old man,
In this passage Lear is talking to the Fool during a thunderstorm. In line 13, Lear’s words are short and quick, and make a sound similar to rain. Lear is coming to the realization that nature is stronger than he is when he says, “I tax not you, you elements with unkindness.” Lear still believes that he is “a little god” as James I through this statement, and the uses of monetary language towards earth’s elements. As the passage goes on, he realizes that nature isn’t going to pay taxes towards him; in fact he is a slave to nature and the natural world and will die like everyone else. The use of the word unkindness shows that nature is not moral, and will not pity him, and that nature is not a projection of King Lear himself, rather nature is completely separate and goes on regardless. However, this appears to be contradictory because in the play, this storm goes on as Lear goes into madness at the climax of the play. The storm that Lear is referring to is very much a reflection of Lear’s emotions.
Dead as earth
Echoed again in Lear's cry, "No, no, no life," in line 305, this sentiment informs our reading--or hearing--of the entirety of the play, and connects the ideas of early history with the hopelessness of solving life's problems. We have the sense that because the whole world is dead, there can be no motion or development of a true being. if this play takes place in Albion, the name of early England, and they didn't have an answer, then what tells us we know now? Besides connecting to the religious turmoil and changes that England was going through during this period, this thought brings us to the ultimate impotence of the theater itself. As a mirror of the world, the theater cannot contain an answer and is as empty and dead as the thing it mirrors.
Max Porter Zasada
TA Ian Hoch
Nostalgia of Reapolitik
Hector Cueva
TA Aaron Gorelik
Role of Blindness in King Lear
As Regan states, Lear “hath ever but slenderly known himself” (I.i.294-5), signifying her father is old and completely unaware of those around him, and more importantly, unaware of himself. Lear literally demonstrates blindness in not recognizing Kent, the subject the king banished for siding with Cordelia. This illustrates that while he had power, Lear could not see in plain sight the loyalty of his subject, but the king later relies on Kent’s service as he pretends to be someone else. Edgar, likewise, later disguises himself as Poor Tom, and though Gloucester literally cannot see his son, he does finally realize Edgar’s good character.
As for Gloucester, when his bastard son Edmund shows him the letter that Edgar supposedly wrote, the Earl literally does not see that the document is forged, asking Edmund “You know the character [handwriting] to be your brother’s?” (I.ii.62-3). While there is no way to know if Gloucester could recognize the difference in handwriting between his two sons, he obviously is blind to the fact that it is Edmund who is the one plotting to kill him and hasten his inheritance. Cornwall malevolently plucks out Gloucester’s eyes, telling him “upon these eyes of thine I’ll set my foot” (III.vii.69); when Regan announces Edmund was the one who revealed the earl’s treason, Gloucester exclaims “O my follies! Then Edgar was abused [slandered]” (III.vii.94). Ironically, it is not until Gloucester literally loses his sight that he sees the truth concerning his two sons. Similarly, it is not until King Lear suffers by descending into insanity and enduring the storm, that he acknowledges he is a “very foolish fond [silly] old man” (IV.vii.61) and pleads for Cordelia’s forgiveness.
Michael Benitez
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Ekphrasis
An example would be in "Antony and Cleopatra" when Enobarbus describes Cleopatra on the barge in Act 2, Scene 2. This freezes the decadence of Egypt.
-Michelle Gonzalez
Gorelik, 1C
Language as a Source of Power in The Tempest
Rossely Amarante
Aaron Gorelik
Justice in King Lear
"The gods are just" Edgar (IV.i.37–38)
In class, we talked a lot about the world of King Lear and the apparent indifference nature has to mankind. Professor pointed out that good things don't necessarily happen to the good people in this play. And if that's so, if there is no logic to the bad, then what is the meaning of tragedy? If we can't categorize the succession of terrible events in the play as being fair or unfair then King Learcan't really be a tragedy at all. The play loses the limits that justice would put on it and, because of this, the play loses its meaning. Just as King Lear gradually accepts the indifferent, superior power of nature, so must the audience accept that their lives are as meaningless and lacking in justice as the characters on the stage. “As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods; / They kill us for their sport,” Gloucester says, implying how foolish mankind, as well as the audience, is to assume that the natural world works with the goal of justice in mind. Edgar though, offers a different opinion that the "gods are just." So which is it? In a way, it does almost seem like poetic justice that King Lear loses the only daughter who truly loved him right after he realizes how poorly he mistreated her. But it's justice at the expense of an injustice to the kind-hearted Cordelia. Can justice be both existent and non-existent at the same time? In the end of the play, it seems like we're just left with a disturbing uncertainty rather than a definite answer. There is good that triumphs at the end of the play but there is also death and madness. In a sense, Shakespeare's King Lear doesn't bother to answer anything for the audience but rather live in a state of constant questioning right along with us.
Courtney Powell
Hoch/1B
Gonzalo's Speech--I' the commonwealth I would by contraries
GONZALO
I' the commonwealth I would by contraries
Execute all things; for no kind of traffic
Would I admit; no name of magistrate;
Letters should not be known; riches, poverty,
And use of service, none; contract, succession,
Bourn, bound of land, tilth, vineyard, none;
No use of metal, corn, or wine, or oil;
No occupation; all men idle, all;
And women too, but innocent and pure;
No sovereignty;--
Little explained in class that in order to have a utopia one must have another person to keep that vision clear in order to reach that desired place. LIttle also said that to the key word is no. If utopia is supposed to be a sublime paradise then why is is so policed? Utopia in the play so heavily regulated and oppressive. Prospero's utopia is his own hell and therefore like Adam and Eve, he too loses paradise. What is interesting about Gonzalo's speech is that he ripped it off someone else. Shakespeare plagiarized from and essay called Michael Montaigne “of the Cannibals” translated into English in 1603 John Florio.
Ian Hoch
Alma Solis 1B
12/04/2008
Nostalgia in Antony and Cleopatra
Ashley Wynn
Ian Hoch, Dis 1E
Key Term: Nostalgia of Realpolitik
This term was introduced in class in relation to Antony and Cleopatra, specifically the way that the Romans discuss Antony. The Triumvirates display their nostalgia for the way Antony once was, the Roman that he used to embody. They are really expressing their nostalgia for the way Rome was. However, Rome was never really like that, they are just displaying their desire for what they want Rome to be.
Brittany Buckalew
New English vs. Old English
Stephanie Bates
T.A.- Gorelik
Section 1F
The Tempest
Ana Davila
Section 1F
Gorelik
Schadenfreude
Claudia Acevedo
Aaron Gorelik
Section 1C
Utopia/Dystopia
Dystopia: (a famous one cited by Little was Brave New World). It is a nightmare place, the opposite of utopia.
Relation to "The Tempest": Is the island a utopia or a dystopia? One man's utopia is another's dystopia. Depending on the reading of the text, you can coax out either extreme (it's weird how closely these two opposites are related).
-Ashley Smith, Discussion F (Aaron)
Lear's Stripped Identity
Jacob Lopez
Ian Hoch
Section 1E
Ending of King Lear
I was just going over my notes for King Lear, and at the very end of my notes for this play I had written something about the odd ending of the play, in the sense that a great tragedy must have a great person fall from great heights, and this does not happen in King Lear. I never thought too hard about it because the notes were just scribbled down at the end of class, but the idea of Lear's fall has already occurred in the play early on, which led me to think throughout the play, what's to come next? I was always anticipating, rather than getting into the storyline. Unlike Macbeth, for instance, where everything is built up so to such a great conclusion to the play, in this one the anticlimactic ending really comes through, and it left me feeling slightly depressed at the idea that the greatness is lost so early on in the play, and everyone has to suffer through it before being killed off anyway. Don't get me wrong, it's one of my favourite plays, but for a play that was so overdramatic and filled with exaggeration at the beginning, the ending just doesn't quite match to me.
Anyway, that's my two cents =)
Good luck on the final!
Jessica White
TA: Amanda Waldo
Section 1D
Marriage in The Tempest
PROSPERO. Then as my gift and thine own acquisition Worthily purchased, take my daughter. But If thou dost break her virgin knot before All sanctimonious ceremonies may With full and holy rite be ministered, No sweet aspersion shall the heavens let fall To make this contract grow, but barren hate Sour-eyed disdain, and discord shall bestrew The union of your bed with weeds so loathly That you shall hate it both. Therefore take heed, As Hymen's lamps shall light you. (4.1.13-23)
We can see that through this quote the marriage ceremony holds a stronger bond with society then it did in Measure for Measure. And maybe this is Shakespeare’s way of telling his audience that marriage is defined by us and that whatever way one wishes to be married or whoever one wishes to marry, is of no concern to anyone but those who are being married. Marriage is a bond between man and heaven, not man and society.
Spencer Sohler
Last Post
Why does Caliban feel the need to be in servitude to Prospero after he and his men arrive on the island and to what extent does witchcraft play, if at all, in this loyality?
Nichol Forbes
Ian Hoch
Section 1E
Metatheater in Othello
Let us be way, let us hide our loves',
And then, sir, would he grip and wring my hand,
Cry 'O, sweet creature!', then kiss me hard,
As if he plucked up kisses by the roots,
That grew upon my lips, lay his leg o'er my thigh,
And sigh, and kiss, and then cry 'Cursed fate,
That gave thee to the Moor!'"
- Othello 3.3.423-430
As Iago acts out this fictitious vignette, he assumes the role of an author, Othello functions as the audience, and the fabrication of Cassio speaking of Desdamona in his sleep becomes the dram. The moment is metatheatrical as it calls attention to the construct of the play. The audience's awareness of the fiction is enhanced by the fact that Iago is relating an account that never actually transpired. Like an author, Iago utilizes dialogue and action to create a story, which he presents to Othello as reality. Interestingly, however, the power of action in developing meaning is undermined, as Iago's words are all that is needed to create an event. Even though the account Iago relates never actually took place, language is influential enough to deceive Othello into thinking that it did, and, as a result, the fabricated event yields real consequences.
Last post
Why does Caliban feel the need to be in servitude to Prospero after he and his men arrive on the island and to what extent does witchcraft play, if at all, in this loyality?
"Empty Space" in Antony and Cleopatra; close reading
In Rome, as well as I mechanic slaves
With greasy aprons, rules, and hammers, shall
Uplift us to the view; in their thick breaths,
Rank of gross diet, shall be enclouded,
And forced to drink their vapour.
Nay, 'tis most certain, Iras: saucy lictors
Will catch at us, like strumpets; and scald rhymers
Ballad us out o' tune: the quick comedians
Extemporally will stage us, and present
Our Alexandrian revels; Antony
Shall be brought drunken forth, and I shall see
Some squeaking Cleopatra boy my greatness
I' the posture of a whore. (Cleopatra; 5.2.203-217)
Cleopatra warns her attendant Iras that if they are to be taken back to Rome their bodies will be “puppet[s]”, “mechan[ical]” objects devoid of self control. Without control over her own body, Cleopatra will merely be a “slave” of the people and she will be forced, among other things, to assume the expected role of the woman: “greasy aprons” and “rules”. Her body as a puppet is further conveyed with the notion of having being “forced to drink [the Romans] vapour” - Cleopatra will not only lose control of her body - she will be forced, perhaps injected, with the “vapour”, or ideology, of Romans. This sexual innuendo further suggests that Cleopatra will lose her ability to make sexual decisions on her own. The extent to which Cleopatra uses bodily imagery and the loss of control of the body in this monologue strengthens the notion of her body as an empty space. She realizes that surrendering her body to Rome will result in the masses forcing their expected, assumed, and fantastical notions of who “Cleopatra” should be in their eyes. At no better point in this monologue does Cleopatra, and ultimately Shakespeare, convey the body as an “empty space” than with the invocation of metatheatre; Cleopatra is worried that she and Iras will be commoditized as “scald rhymers / ballad us out o’tune: the quick comedians / extemporally will stage us…I shall see / some squeaking Cleopatra boy my greatness / I’the posture of a whore.” Cleopatra realizes that once her body is able to be portrayed however the masses wish it to be (i.e. at a playhouse), she will have lost all individuality and solely be the subject of the peoples’ intents. She will be presented, as she was in act two scene five, before she was aware of her body’s relation to her persona, as “the posture of a whore” - i.e. that which the masses demand her to be portrayed as.
Michael Dacks Milliken
TA Ian Hoch; discussion 1b
Utopia and Dystopia
Thomas Marren
Michel de Montaigne's "of the cannibals"
Brian Casillas
Aaron Gorelik
Disc 1C
Music of the Spheres
This idea relates to Caliban's speech of 3.2.130:
"Be not afeard. The isle is full of noises,
Sounds, and sweetairs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometimes voices
That if I then had waked after long sleep
Will make me sleep again; and then in dreaming
The clouds methought would open and show riches
Ready to drop upon me, that when I waked
I cried to dream again."
As Professor Little described in class, a true utopia will come when people stop talking and regulating the world, and learn how to find peace in listening. The world is perfect in itself, and true happiness may come from enjoying this perfection through our senses. This idea relates back to Shakespeare and the writing of plays. As The Tempest was his last play, this passage may emphasize his decision to stop writing plays and let the world continue in its perfection without his direct involvement.
Taylor Price, Ian Hoch, Section B
Religious Conversion and Colonization in The Tempest
In the play, Caliban is associated as one having others come in to his land and impede and his lifestyle. Stefano and Trinculo both force their ideals upon Caliban, symbolized by their alcohol. In Act 2, scene 2, the two colonizers get Caliban drunk:
"Come on your ways. Open your mouth. Here is that
which will give language to you, cat. Open your mouth. This
will shake your shaking, I can tell you, and that soundly. You
cannot tell who's your friend. Open your chaps again."
While there are other similar passages, this is the first instance in which the seemingly reluctant Caliban has alcohol forced upon him by Stefano and Trinculo. Shakespeare uses these two characters to portray how inept colonizing countries, England included, are in terms of colonizing. The colonies end up despising the colonizers, in part because their culture is destroyed.
Andrew Karcher
TA: Ian Hoch
Section 1E
Lear's Utopian World Falls into Dystopia
Utopia is a name for an ideal community, taken from the title of a book written in 1516 by Sir Thomas More describing a fictional island in the Atlantic Ocean, possessing a seemingly perfect socio-politico-legal system. The term has been used to describe both intentional communities that attempted to create an ideal society, and fictional societies portrayed in literature. "Utopia" is sometimes used pejoratively, in reference to an unrealistic ideal that is impossible to achieve, and has spawned other concepts, most prominently dystopia.
A dystopian society is one in which the conditions of life are miserable, characterized by human misery, poverty, oppression, violence, disease, and/or pollution (Wikipedia).
Shakespeare takes these themes at shows them both at work in his play, King Lear. Through the betrayal of the plays characters we see a utopian world fall into dystopia. It is because of this betrayal that we see the workings of wickedness in both the familial and political realms, as brothers betray brothers and children betray fathers. Goneril and Regan’s betrayal of Lear raises them to power in Britain, where Edmund, who has betrayed both Edgar and Gloucester, joins them. It is as this betrayal occurs, that we see Lear’s utopian world turn into a barren landscape, which is filled with death and deceit. It, therefore, can be said that each of these characters are responsible for their own destinies due to their actions, which will ultimately shape the world in which they inhabit.
William Hamilton
Masques and The Tempest
Stephanie Ingraham
Section 1B Ian Hoch
Utopia and Dystopia in "The Tempest"
** The English word "Utopia" comes from the Greek word "Ut Topia", literally meaning "no place".
** The term was officially coined in 1511 by Thomas Moore in his work "Utopia"; originally written in Latin and then translated into English.
** We use the word to mean a 'perfect' or 'ideal' place
** The opposite of "utopia" is "dystopia" - an example of which is Huxley's "Brave New World"
** Dystopia defines a negative or nightmarish place standing in direct opposition to utopia.
** In the context of "The Tempest", it is unclear whether we are speaking of utopia or dystopia as one man's utopia is another man's nightmare. For example, Prospero creates his perfect utopian world when he comes to the island; for Caliban, however, this same space is represented as dystopia. This, then, brings up the question "Whose play is this?" Does it belong to Prospero or to Caliban - or either?
** In a larger context, "The Tempest" might be Shakespeare's most political play; especially in its examination of the establishment of both utopias and dystopias.
** In brief, the play also explores the following: In order for any of us to have a utopia, someone must be in charge of the utopian vision; it also explores how heavily policed the idea of a "utopia" is.
** Finally, there is a very fine line between a utopian culture and an oppressive culture.
--Kate McAvoy
Section IE, Ian Hoch
The "Emptiness" of the stage
Why should a dog, a horse, a rat have life,
And though no breath at all?"
King Lear (Lines 311-313) Bevington Ed.
The above quote emphasizes that the world does not have a sense of morality or judgement that it acts upon humanity. This statement in turn breaks down other fallacies of the world. If there is no universal morality, there need not be any notion that hidden hands are pulling strings, and any belief or faith in a diety is un founded because the world is empty. Any significance we live in life is what we give it.
The class became depressed with the aforementioned, but i think it is the most positive message Shakespeare could have given us. If the world is empty, then it is up to our individual selves (BIG emphasis on "individual")to make life what ever we want- of course with respect to humanity as a whole.
Jose "Abel" Gonzalez, SECTION 1E
Before the Fall/After the Fall
Margarete Villalobos
Aaron Gorelik
Disc. 1C
Coriolanus and Tarquin/Lucrece
Be singly counterpoised. At sixteen years,
When Tarquin made a head for Rome, he fought
Beyond the mark of others.
However, there is no mention of Lucrece--the woman so critical to Rome's founding. According to legend (and wiki), her rape and suicide sparked the people of Rome to overthrow the monarchy. The play's central concern of the shifting identity of Rome must then contend as well with the denial of this woman's suffering and the implications of being founded on such an immoral act. Furthermore, imagery of rape surrounding the desire to see Coriolanus's battle wounds harkens to this untold story.
Kimberlee Vander Most
Waldo ~ 1 D
Lears Shadow
Does Lear walk thus, speak thus? Where are his eyes?
Either his notion weakens, or his discernings
Are lethargied--Ha! Waking? 'Tis not so.
Who is it that can tell me who I am?
Lear's shadow.
This passage is representative of many of the larger themes throughout the play. Lear attempts to understand what it means to be "Lear," and when he cannot decide, he asks a fool. The ridiculousness of this interaction--a king asking about his identity with a fool--reflects the larger nihilistic undertones throughout the play. Shakespeare is stripping away the scripts Lear adheres to systematically: first his walk, then his speech (his lofty language), then his very thoughts, or "notions." Finally the fool reveals that he is merely a shadow of himself. This is significant both in terms of the meaninglessness of scripts, but also in terms of Lear as a remnant. He is a figment of the imagination, a 2-bodied king who has given away his physical body, and he is what remains after disillusionment--a shadow.
Waldo's section at 5:00
Samantha Moeller
Cleopatra as Eroticized Other
She is usually described through the eyes of the Romans, who view her as inherently foreign. In the famous barge scene, for example, the Roman speaking is supposedly describing Cleopatra's personal allure, but the bulk of the lines are devoted to her exotic surroundings rather than to the queen herself.
Her sexuality is described in almost reverent terms, for even "the holy priests/bless her when she is riggish" (2.2.244-245).
While Cleopatra is being portrayed in this one-dimensional method by the characters within the play, the play itself seems to question this construct exactly because it is a construct -- Cleopatra is built up by the Romans observing her and has little say in her own reputation. Shakespeare does this by taking this eroticized queen and reminding audiences over and again that she is being portrayed by a boy actor. He does this in the scene where Cleopatra brags of how she "put [her] tires and mantles on [Antony] whilst/[she] wore his sword Phillipan" (2.5.22-23). This blatant gender reversal reminds audiences that this erotic queen exists entirely in their minds, and needs no basis in reality.
This especially shows through when Cleopatra rails against the thought of seeing "some squeaking Cleopatra boy [her] greatness i' th' posture of a whore" -- not only reminding English audiences what/who they are watching, but turning the tables and making England seem strange and perverse while England is marking her as such.
Carolyn Wang
Menenius and Failed Storytelling
However, later in the play (precisely 3.1 beginning line 179), Menenius' speech is troubled under the demands of the citizens. He says, "What is about to be? I am out of breath; / Confusion's near, I cannot speak." (3.1 187-88). Menenius, who was so gifted in speech, is losing his influence. His lines in this scene are now only about one to two lines long. This confusion is reflective of Rome's confusion regarding its identity. There's the whole issue of virtus and civitas being incompatible. But I find the idea of theater falling into the spectacle, more interesting. Menenius had so longed relied on speech, and now his speech is futile under the demands of the plebians/audience for visual.
Rachel Humphrey
sec. 1c
Ariel and Prospero's relationship
While it is significant that Prospero saved Ariel from the "cloven pine" (1.2.277) and the witch Sycorax, he threatens to confine Ariel for "twelve winters" (1.2.296) if she fails to comply with his demands. While Prospero tries to remind Ariel of what worse fate she might have suffered if he had not freed her, he also shows himself to feel the same lack of compassion for the spirit as Sycorax did, which brings up the question of whether Ariel is truly better off in Prospero's service than in the service of Sycorax. This problematic relationship between spirit and master is also an issue because we never actually see Prospero carry out his promise to release Ariel from her sentence of servitude.
Emily Chang
Discussion 1C
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods;
They kill us for their sport.
These words are spoken by Gloucester in act IV scene i. He has just been blinded by Cornwall and Regan and is wandering on the heath. His words reflect the deep despair that has taken hold of him and drives him to wish he were dead. They also work to highlight one of the play's main themes, the question of whether or not there is justice in the universe. Gloucester suggests that there is no good order in the universe and that man is incapable of imposing his own moral ideas upon the harsh laws of the world. There is only "sport" of cruel gods who in turn reward cruelty. The plays events seem to coincide with Gloucester's outlook on the world. The good die along with the bad and there is no reason behind the unbearable suffering that takes place.
-Meline Kyurkchyan
use of nouns in King Lear
Lauren Rosenthal
Discussion 1C
blazon
Thomas Christian
Ekphrasis in Antony and Cleopatra
The barge she sat in, like a burnish'd throne,
Burn'd on the water: the poop was beaten gold;
Purple the sails, and so perfumed that
The winds were love-sick with them; the oars were silver,
Which to the tune of flutes kept stroke, and made
The water which they beat to follow faster,
As amorous of their strokes. For her own person,
It beggar'd all description: she did lie
In her pavilion--cloth-of-gold of tissue--
O'er-picturing that Venus where we see
The fancy outwork nature: on each side her
Stood pretty dimpled boys, like smiling Cupids,
With divers-colour'd fans, whose wind did seem
To glow the delicate cheeks which they did cool,
And what they undid did. (2.2.197-211)
Her gentlewomen, like the Nereides,
So many mermaids, tended her i' the eyes,
And made their bends adornings: at the helm
A seeming mermaid steers: the silken tackle
Swell with the touches of those flower-soft hands,
That yarely frame the office. From the barge
A strange invisible perfume hits the sense
Of the adjacent wharfs. The city cast
Her people out upon her; and Antony,
Enthroned i' the market-place, did sit alone,
Whistling to the air; which, but for vacancy,
Had gone to gaze on Cleopatra too,
And made a gap in nature. (2.2.213.223)
Shakespeare paints a vivid and desirable image of the Queen of the Nile which is no longer present in the play. In many ways it teases the audience, contributing to the sense nostalgia already present in the play. The audience desires this lush, romanticized image of Cleopatra and of Egypt in both defeat and triumph, but Shakespeare only tantalizes them with this description that apeals to all senses, rather than bring the play to this desired place.
Amber Ackerman
Section 1B
Ian Hoch
3 quick defs/descriptions
king's 2 bodies-one body is spiritual, one is physical; Lear believed he could give up physical body but maintain spiritual; Lear believed spiritual was granted by God
Cleopatra-not presumably good looking; one of martest women in history; probably a virgin before Pompey; very productive writer; fought in own military; did not sleep with lots of men; held off Roman Empire from taking over Egypt longer than anyone else defended their city
Brantley Watson
Amanda Waldo
1D
The Black Friar's Theater
The Tempest and Colonization
I thought it was interesting when Professor Little made the comment in lecture that The Tempest is Shakespeare’s most popular play in some countries, especially those that have experience with colonization. In many ways, events in The Tempest do resemble European colonization. All of the characters who land on the island find it within their rights to claim it and make it their own. Gonzalo is an example of one character who dreams that he can transform the island into what he wants it to be, creating a perfect society nostalgic of the golden age, with Gonzalo as its leader. Prospero, though, is the main allegorical colonizer figure in the play. He thinks he has complete authority over the island, even though Sycorax and Caliban had already been living there prior to his arrival. Prospero immediately turns Caliban into his servant, forcing him to do all of his work on the island. According to Caliban, he was once his “own king” (I.ii.342), but now he is a prisoner. Prospero and Miranda, acting as the colonizers, use very patronizing language toward him and act as though he owes something to them. They feel he should be happy that they found him and supposedly taught him how to be more civilized, particularly by teaching him to speak their own language. While they continue to deny Caliban his freedom throughout the play, Prospero also constantly denies Ariel his freedom. Prospero seems to promise Ariel that he will have his freedom soon, but up until the very end of the play, he withholds Ariel’s freedom, in an assertion of his own control.
Throughout the play, there are many examples of outsiders craving power and feeling they can simply go in and take it. Antonio usurped the dukedom from Prospero, Sebastian plotted to usurp the throne from Alonso, and Prospero usurped freedom from Caliban. These characters in The Tempest all want power and control. As Professor Little suggested, Shakespeare faced his own disillusionment in The Tempest, and he began to reflect on the absolutism he saw in himself as an artist through these characters.
Laura Anderson, 1B