Thursday, November 14, 2019
Imagery in The Tempest, by William Shakespeare Essays -- Tempest essay
   Ã  Ã  Ã   William Shakespeare's play The  Tempest utilizes extensive imagery which goes beyond merely creating atmosphere  and background or emphasizing the major themes of the play. The supernatural  plays a considerable role in the play, thus so does the use of imagery, which is  more extensive and somewhat different from many other of Shakespeare's works.  The imagery is used as a mediator of supernatural powers, to emphasize the  natural scene of action, and establish the enchanted island which becomes vivid  through such a wealth of single features and of concrete touches. Therefore  throughout the play imagery serves a much larger role than creating atmosphere,  and is actually involved in most aspects of the play.     Ã       In The Tempest, the actual catastrophe is at the beginning, and not at the  end or in the middle of the play. And everything derives and develops from this  beginning. Thus the images in this first scene that act as links with the  previous events have not the function of preparing what is to come; they are  rather a reminiscence, or an afterthought, they keep awake our remembrance of  what has happened. The manner in which an actual event, by means of the imagery,  pervades and overcasts the whole play is a good instance of Shakespeare's  technique, sometimes employed by him in his later plays, of transforming  frequently used symbolic imagery into actual incident.     Ã       The "sea-storm" lingering in our memory, together with the recollection of  wind, water and conflicting elements, thus constitutes one of the main streams  of imagery which, from the second scene onwards, flow through the play. In the  second scene, we are still under the impression of what we have witnessed just  before; and, accordin...              ...     Ã       Ã  The examination of the imagery in The Tempest showed how vividly,  sensuously and precisely this nature-world was represented. As we have already  said, this concreteness and realness; conveyed through the imagery, constitutes  a counterpart to the world of the supernatural in this play. The supernatural,  in being based on firm reality, gains probability and convincing power.     Ã       Ã       Bibliography     Ã       Shakespeare, W. The Tempest. Ed. Sutherland, J.R. (1990)     Ã       G. Wilson Knight, (1932) The Shakespearean Tempest, Oxford     Ã       Elizabeth Holmes, (1976) Aspects of Elizabethan Imagery, Oxford     Ã       Mikhail M. Morozor, (1989)"The Individualization of Shakespeare's Characters  through Imagery", Shakespeare Survey.     Ã       Kenneth Goddard, "Imagery and Drama" (1992) University Journal     Ã       B. Thompson, (1995) Notes on The Tempest                      
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