CalibanHarold Bloom Presents literary criticism focusing on Caliban, the grotesque character from Shakespeare's The Tempest who also appears in works by Robert Browning and W.H. Auden. |
Contents
CRITICAL ESSAYS | 89 |
SHAKESPEARES EXISTENTIAL COMEDY | 109 |
CALIBAN | 124 |
Copyright | |
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actor American animal appearance Ariel artist audience become Black Elk Speaks Browning Browning's Caliban upon Setebos called cannibal character civilization colonialism colonialist colonialist discourse context creature critics culture curse death deformed described dramatic dream earth Elizabethan English essay European evil Falstaff Ferdinand figure fish Gonzalo human imagination Indians interpretation island isle Jan Kott Kermode King language literary live London lust Macbeth magic masque means mind Miranda Mirror monster moral native nature Noble Savage perhaps play play's poem poetry political Press primitive Prospero reference relation role savage scene seems sense sexual Shakespeare Quarterly Shylock slave speak speech spirit stage Stephano Stephano and Trinculo strange suggests supernatural Sycorax symbol Tempest Theatre thee thing of darkness thou thought Trinculo Univ University Virginia vision W. H. Auden Wild William Shakespeare Wilson Knight witch words York