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How Does Shakespeare Present Caliban In The Tempest

Decent Essays

Caliban, in Shakespeare’s The Tempest, is a pitiful and plaintive vassal, one whose native island was stolen from him following the usurpation of Prospero by his brother, Antonio. Prospero sought refuge on the sequestered, unnamed Caribbean island that serves as the play’s setting, whereupon he exploited Caliban’s generosity, subjugated the “poisonous slave” (I.II. 383), and tethered him to an eternity of service. In the early play, before the main players’ concealed motivations¬– obfuscated by layers of rhetoric and trickery– are revealed, Shakespeare’s characterization of Caliban exemplifies his abject misery, and more potently, his sympathetic nature. Through Caliban’s interactions with Trinculo and Stephano in Act II, Scene II, the audience simultaneously reads his character as foolish and formerly benign. Shakespeare demonstrates how Caliban’s inherent, virtuous qualities have been impaired and tarnished by his interaction with contextual ‘others’– Prospero, in this case. Caliban …show more content…

Dr. Leah Wickham, in an article on the rehabilitation process for women recovering from the sex slave– the most accurate modern parallel to the systematic enslavement from the past– notes that “women
 and 
children 
have
 difficulty
 formulating 
their 
identity 
apart
 from
 being 
a 
sexual 
object” 
(Wickham, 2009). For Caliban, the ‘servant’ or “delicate monster” (II.II. 92-93) that others identify him by have become integral components of his cardinal makeup. Try as he might, curse Caliban as he might, he struggles to formulate an autonomous identity. The audience is disappointed in Caliban’s reversal of fortune– Stephano is posed to do with him exactly what Prospero has done– but his sympathy still remains dominant. He is so broken and misguided that the audience cannot help but feel pity for

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