Sunday, March 24, 2019
Four Sides of Shakespeares The Tempest :: Tempest essays
Four Sides of The Tempest     1 They solely enter the circle which Prospero had made, and there stand charmd     In the graduation Folio edition of The Tempest, at the climax of the action, Shakespeare instructs that the magician Prospero inscribe a magic circle on the bare Elizabethan stage into which all the various characters of the action exit be drawn sage and fool, monarch butterfly and savage, clown and lover, young and old, cynic and innocent.     It is as if Shakespeare, by dint of with(predicate) Prospero, has assembled a object lesson sample of divided humanity, and brought them together deliberately to re-enact the oldest of rituals and the most insistent themes of annals and of psychology The divisions among these characters resonate deeply, with many implications. They have been elaborated in generations of westward thought together with Prospero, the spirit Ariel and the grotesque Caliban have been read through such crit ical lenses as Thomas Aquinas division of human constitution between spiritual and animal elements, or Darwins evolutionary ladder, or Freuds superego and id,or through images of colonialism, or Jungs conflation of history with psychology, in which our world is dissociated like a neurotic. In such a view, the reintegration of fractured family and society that takes place in this play is at the same time a reintegration of the divided and conflicted self into health and wholeness.     In Georgia Shakespeare Festival s The Tempest, the circle on the stage floor, the Shakespearean subscribe to of wholeness, is the Jungian symbol of the Quaternity of the Mandala,a square-within-a-circle that was a symbol of the contract of opposites and a sign of the transformation of both individual and collective consciousness, the estimable promise of human potential.     Thus, when Prospero, having chosen the road of reconciliation over that of recrimination and reje ction, draws the marauding and rebellious Caliban into the magic circle, only to say of him This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine, we seem for a moment to pass beyond the logic of power and punishment into a higher, more inclusive awareness. The magician who will shortly surrender his powers, sees and acknowledges the brutish side of himself, his own abjection, power-lust, possessive-ness, and scheming resentment.
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