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Chapter 6 - The Political, the Aesthetic, and the Utopian in The Tempest

Enchantment in a Disenchanted World

from Part II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 June 2022

Hugh Grady
Affiliation:
Arcadia University, Pennsylvania
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Summary

Chapter 6 shows The Tempest dispersing instances of the aesthetic-utopian and instrumental political power throughout until a remarkable ending imposes a tragicomic aesthetic over all other materials in the play. In describing the disenchanted early modern world with fantasies of enchantment, in representing instrumental reason as magical manipulation of natural spirits, and in manifesting the power of aesthetic representations to heal, restore, and regenerate a fallen humanity, the play is one of Shakespeare’s consummate examples of the aesthetic-utopian. At the center of the play is the master–slave pair Prospero and Caliban. Each is a deposed sovereign in a narrative of betrayal, forming the center of two (fragmentary) dramas that are each an essential part of the larger play. And in the play’s implied after-time, both are restored to their former polities as sovereigns. And both see something of the foolishness of the political struggles in which they had lived so long. As such, they are important parts of the aesthetic-utopian in the play’s conclusion, which does not so much defeat the political as declare it irrelevant to the play’s ultimate aesthetic-utopian vision.

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Shakespeare's Dialectic of Hope
From the Political to the Utopian
, pp. 193 - 230
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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