A Tempest by Aime Cesaire
Mourning
Becomes Electra comes as a Modern Tragedy, the play features murder, adultery,
incestuous love and revenge , weak relationship of family members. We can see
different minds of people , their secrets, hubris, fate and honor.
Doctor
Faustus, indeed, is a tragic hero. His Black deeds lead him to disaster. Despite
repentance, he is punished. His all escaping ways fail to save him from
declination. We can say that Marlowe, by this play, wants to say that if we go
against God, we will have to pay a great cost or we will be punished.
Aime
Cesaire Cesaire transforms the characters and transposes the scenes to reveal
Shakespeare’s Prospero as the exploitative European power and Caliban and Ariel
as the exploited natives. Cesaire’s A Tempest is an effective response to
Shakespeare’s The Tempest because he interprets it from the perspective of the
colonized and raises a conflict with Shakespeare as an icon of the literary
canon.
Besides
that in In The Tempest by William Shakespeare one might argue that colonialism
is a reoccurring theme throughout the play because of the slave-master
relationship between Ariel and Caliban and Prospero.
A
Tempest is a postcolonial revision of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest
and draws heavily on the original play—the cast of characters is, for the most
part, the same, and the foundation of the plot follows the same basic premise.
Prospero has been exiled and lives on a secluded island, and he drums up a
violent storm to drive his daughter’s ship ashore. The island, however, is
somewhere in the Caribbean, Ariel is a mulatto slave rather than a sprite, and
Caliban is a black slave.
A
Tempest focuses on the plight of Ariel and Caliban the never-ending quest
to gain freedom from Prospero and his rule over the island. Ariel, dutiful to
Prospero, follows all orders given to him and sincerely believes that Prospero
will honor his promise of emancipation. Caliban, on the other hand, slights
Prospero at every opportunity: upon entering the first act, Caliban greets
Prospero by saying “Uhuru!”, the Swahili word for “freedom.” Prospero
complains that Caliban often speaks in his native language which Prospero has
forbidden. This prompts Caliban to attempt to claim birthrights to the island,
angering Prospero who threatens to whip Caliban.
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