出版社:Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
摘要:Shakespeare's Tempest has been discussed in relation to the European colonial adventure in the New World as a representation of the native as "natural man." In the last two decades, the "post-colonial" reading of Tempest questions the central gaze (Prospero represents political and magic powers) that makes of Caliban a monster, an slave deprived of moral judgement. This article confronts that reading with the notion that Caliban is also a human creature that, thanks to language not only learns "to curse" but also to name, to recognize the abundance of nature in his native island. It moves, thus, from the "natural man" to the "good savage", a version favored by Montaigne and not ignored by Shakespeare.
关键词:Shakespeare;Calibán;Montaigne;Antonio de Esteva;abundance;natural man;good savage;colonial;post-colonial;Stephen Grinbaltt;Roberto Fernández Retamar;Renan;Aime Cesar;Shakespeare;Calibán;Montaigne;Antonio de Esteva;abundancia;hombre natural;buen salvaje;colonial;post-colonial;Stephen Grinbaltt;Roberto Fernández Retamar;Renan;Aime Cesar