ABOUT THIS BOOKPlaces sexuality at the center of Caribbean responses to Shakespeare's play.
Shakespeare's The Tempest has long been claimed by colonials and postcolonial thinkers alike as the dramatic work that most enables them to confront their entangled history, recognized as early modernity's most extensive engagement with the vexing issues of colonialism--race, dispossession, language, European displacement and occupation, disregard for native culture.
Tempest in the Caribbean reads some of the "classic" anticolonial texts--by Aimé Césaire, Roberto Fernández Retamar, George Lamming, and Frantz Fanon, for instance--through the lens of feminist and queer analysis exemplified by the theoretical essays of Sylvia Wynter and the work of Michelle Cliff. Extending the Tempest plot, Goldberg considers recent works by Caribbean authors and social theorists, among them Patricia Powell, Jamaica Kincaid, and Hilton Als. These rewritings, he suggests, and the lived conditions to which they testify, present alternatives to the masculinist and heterosexual bias of the legacy that has been derived from The Tempest.
By placing gender and sexuality at the center of the debate about the uses of Shakespeare for anticolonial purposes, Goldberg's work points to new possibilities that might be articulated through the nexus of race and sexuality.
Jonathan Goldberg is Sir William Osler Professor of English Literature at The Johns Hopkins University. His previous books include Shakespeare's Hand (2003), Desiring Women Writing (1997), Sodometries (1992), and, as editor, Reclaiming Sodom (1994) and Queering the Renaissance (1994).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
A Different Kind of Creature
Caliban's "Woman"
Miranda's Meanings
Notes
Index
Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616, Tempest, Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 Adaptations History and criticism, Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 Appreciation Caribbean Area, Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 Knowledge Caribbean Area, Caribbean literature 20th century History and criticism, Caribbean Area Intellectual life 20th century, Postcolonialism Caribbean Area, Caribbean Area In literature, Castaways in literature, Islands in literature