Friday, October 25, 2019
Essay on the Setting in Shakespeares The Tempest -- Tempest essays
Importance of Setting in The Tempest à à à à Shakespeareââ¬â¢s enchanted island in The Tempest is a restorative pastoral setting, a place where ââ¬Ëno man was his ownââ¬â¢ and a place that offers endless possibilities to the people that arrive on itââ¬â¢s shores. Although the actual location of the island is not known, the worlds of Seneca aptly describe itââ¬â¢s significance to the play ââ¬â it represents the ââ¬Ëbounds of things, the remotest shores of the worldââ¬â¢. On the boundary of reality, the island partakes of both the natural and supernatural both the imaginative and the real. It allows the exploration of both manââ¬â¢s potential and his limitations, his capacity for reform through art and his affinity for political and social realities. It is constructing this opposition between art and reality and in giving Shakespeareââ¬â¢s romance the freedom to explore mankind free from the concerns of everyday life that the setting of The Tempest is crucial to itââ¬â¢s overall dramatic design. à The only scene in the play that does not take place on the island is the opening tempest scene. It is in itself an important use of setting. It hints at the fact that the characters social assumptions will capitulate when exposed to adversity ââ¬â we have the boatswain apparently inappropriately comment none aboard the ship that ââ¬ËI love more than myselfââ¬â¢. In fact, quite the reverse is true. In the court scene we are presented with the characters Antonio and Sebastian who are interested in political gain despite the predicament in which they find themselves. In this respect the setting functions to present the idea that our social conditioning transcends time and place. The inference is that if political clambering can take place on an enchanted island in the middle of now... ...gic and music. à The contrast between the representative characters and the magic art of the island does not resolve itself, rather, it leaves the audience in what Russ McDonald called a ââ¬Å"marginal condition between expectation and understanding, affirmation and skepticism, comedy and tragedyâ⬠. The setting functions to present the worlds of both art and reality in order to affirm the transcendent human desire for power and order, as well as affirm the world of art as a means of dealing with reality. à Bibliography/ Works Cited à Meller, A., Moon, G.T. Literary Shakespeare (1993) Sydney: Canon Publications à Lecture on ââ¬Å"The Tempestâ⬠(1988)à C. Holmes à Shakespeare, W. The Tempest. Ed. Sutherland, J.R. (1990) à Mikhail M. Morozor, (1989)ââ¬Å"The Individualization of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s Characters through Imageryâ⬠, Shakespeare Survey.
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