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Why should you read Shakespeare's "The Tempest"? - Iseult Gillespie

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    Claps of thunder and flashes of lightning
    illuminate a swelling sea,
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    as a ship buckles beneath the waves.
    This is no ordinary storm,
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    but a violent and vengeful tempest,
    and it sets the stage for Shakespeare’s
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    most enigmatic play.
    As the skies clear, we are invited into a
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    world that seems far removed from our own
    but is rife with familiar concerns
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    about freedom, power, and control.
    The Tempest is set on a desert island,
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    exposed to the elements and ruled with
    magic and might by Prospero,
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    the exiled Duke of Milan.
    Betrayed by his brother Antonio,
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    Prospero has been marooned on the island
    for twelve years with his daughter Miranda
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    and his beloved books.
    In this time he’s learned the magic of the
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    island and uses it to
    harness its elementary spirits.
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    He also rules over the island’s
    only earthly inhabitant,
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    the dejected and demonized Caliban.
    But after years of plotting revenge,
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    Prospero’s foe is finally in sight.
    With the help of the fluttering sprite Ariel,
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    the magician destroys his brother’s ship
    and washes its sailors ashore.
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    Prospero’s plotting even extends to his
    daughter’s love life, whom he plans to
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    fall for the stranded prince Ferdinand.
    And as Prospero and Ariel
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    close in on Antonio,
    Caliban joins forces with some
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    drunken sailors,
    who hatch a comic plot to take the island.
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    The play strips society down
    to its basest desires,
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    with each faction in hot pursuit of power
    be it over the land, other people,
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    or their own destiny.
    But Shakespeare knows that power is
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    always a moving target; and as he reveals
    these characters’ dark histories,
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    we begin to wonder if this
    vicious cycle will ever end.
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    Although Prospero was wronged by Antonio,
    he has long inflicted his own
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    abuses on the island,
    hoarding its magical properties
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    and natural re-sources for himself.
    Caliban especially resents
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    this takeover. The son of Sycorax,
    a witch who previously
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    ruled the island, he initially
    helped the exiles find their footing.
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    But he’s since become their slave,
    and rants with furious regret:
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    “And then I loved thee,/And showed thee
    all the qualities o’ th’ isle/The fresh springs,
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    brine pits, barren place and
    fertile./ Cursed be I that did so!”
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    With his thunderous language
    and seething anger,
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    Caliban constantly reminds
    Prospero of what came before:
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    this island’s mine by Sycorax my mother,
    Which thou takest from me.
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    Yet Sycorax also abused the island,
    and imprisoned Ariel until Prospero
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    released him.
    Now Ariel spends the play hoping to repay
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    his debt and earn his freedom,
    while Caliban is enslaved indefinitely
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    or at least as long
    as Prospero is in charge.
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    For these reasons and many more,
    The Tempest has often been read as
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    an exploration of colonialism,
    and the moral dilemmas that come
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    with en-counters of “brave new world(s)."
    Questions of agency and justice
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    hang over the play:
    is Caliban the rightful master of the land?
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    Will Ariel flutter free?
    And is Prospero the mighty overseer
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    or is there some deeper magic at work,
    beyond any one character's grasp?
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    Throughout the play,
    Ariel constantly reminds Prospero
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    of the freedom he is owed.
    But the question lingers of whether
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    the invader will be able
    to relinquish his grip.
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    The question of ending one’s reign is
    particularly potent given that The Tempest
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    is believed to be Shakespeare’s final play.
    In many ways Prospero’s actions echo that
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    of the great entertainer him-self,
    who hatched elaborate plots,
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    maneuvered those around him,
    and cast a spell over characters
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    and audience alike.
    But by the end of his grand performance
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    of power and control,
    Prospero’s final lines see him humbled
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    by his audience - and the power
    that they hold over his creations.
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    With the help of your good hands./
    Gentle breath of yours my sails/
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    Must fill or else my project fails,/
    Which was to please.
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    This evokes Shakespeare’s own role
    as the great entertainer
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    who surrenders himself,
    ultimately, to our applause.
Title:
Why should you read Shakespeare's "The Tempest"? - Iseult Gillespie
Speaker:
Iseult Gillespie
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:35

English subtitles

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