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The Tempest
[edit]Themes and motifs
[edit]- The theatre
- Magic
- Nature vs. Nurture
- Love
- Power
- Reconciliation
- God and humanity
- Colonialism
- The storm
- Masque
Interpretation and criticism
[edit]Modern criticism of The Tempest tends to be grouped under political, postcolonial, and feminist approaches.
- Genre
- Dramatic structure
- Postcolonialist
- Feminist
- Thompson, Ann (1999)
- Political
- Power and social structure
- In The Tempest, power is repeatedly contested
- Boatswain vs. King and Courtiers
- Antonio vs. Prospero
- Ariel and Caliban vs. Prospero
- Stephano vs. Prospero
- Miranda (Ferdinand) vs. Propsero
- Political critics have tended to focus on Prospero's usurpation by Antonio.
- Greenblatt, Stephen (1988)
- Kott, Jan (1965) Shakespeare Our Contemporary
Performance- Covered in Afterlife section
- Psychoanalytic
- The ambivalences and ambiguities have prompted much Psychoanalytic criticism
- anxiety about absent mothers vs. sibling rivalry
- Sexual anxiety
- Prospero's incestous lust for Miranda
- Prospero using Miranda as sexual bait to get an excuse to enslave Caliban
- The sicklemen in the masque represent castration
- Prospero imposes his memory of past events on Ariel and Caliban
- Wish fulfilment: the play ends with Prospero not getting what he wants, sexually and socially alone
- Milan as mother that Antonio usurps
- Cannot be proved or disproved, highly speculative
- Some critics discuss it as a psychiatric case history
- Nevo, Ruth
- Postmodern