2022
DOI: 10.18778/2083-8530.25.07
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The Enemy Other: Discourse of Evil in William Shakespeare’s "The Tempest"

Abstract: Caliban, the ‘enemy Other’ of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest, is a character that allows further investigations of the colonial ideology in its earliest forms; locating ‘evil’ forces outside the continent of Europe and the White race. Caliban, the only non-European character, is typified as the autocratic antagonist of the play whose evil intentions and actions cannot be redeemed. Against such representation, the essay argues that the villainous discourse attributed to Caliban is informed by Renaissance the… Show more

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“…The condition, referenced indirectly in historical observations and literary descriptions, echoes the ancient narrative's focus on bodily emanations and their effects. Shakespeare's reference to Caliban in The Tempest as having a fish-like smell might be seen as an intuitive grasp of medical reality, now fully understood in biochemical terms [ 17 ].…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The condition, referenced indirectly in historical observations and literary descriptions, echoes the ancient narrative's focus on bodily emanations and their effects. Shakespeare's reference to Caliban in The Tempest as having a fish-like smell might be seen as an intuitive grasp of medical reality, now fully understood in biochemical terms [ 17 ].…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%