English
29.11.2021 01:59
190
359
9
Solved by an expert

WILL MARK BRAINLIEST Short-response prompt (15 points) Read the following passage

WILL MARK BRAINLIEST Short-response prompt (15 points)
Read the following passage from Act I, scene ii of The Tempest, in which Prospero summons Caliban.
PROSPERO . . . Come on;
We'll visit Caliban my sIave, who never
YieIds us kind answer.

MIRANDA
'Tis a viIIain, sir,
I do not love to look on.

PROSPERO
But, as 'tis,
We cannot miss him: he does make our fire,
Fetch in our wood and serves in offices
That profit us. What, h0! sIave! CaIiban!
Thou earth, thou! speak.

CALIBAN
[Within] There's wood enough within.

PROSPERO
Come forth, I say! there's other business for thee:
Come, thou tortoise! when?
(. . .)
Thou poisonous slave, got by the devil himself
Upon thy wicked danm, come forth!
From the passage, identify words and phrases that refer to Caliban. Then, analyze how the choice of words shapes readers' first impression of Caliban and shows Prospero and Miranda's attitude toward him. Be sure to use details from the passage to support your analysis.
Show Answers
abosse144
abosse144
4,6(71 marks)

Themes of Colonialism present in this passage:

Fatherhood

Caliban sees Prospero as a fatherly figure, if you come to think of it, Fathers colonize children in as much as they have power over them, over what they eat, what they learn, where they live and so forth.

"When thou cames first, thou strokeds me and madest much of me, wouldst give me water with berries in't, and teach me how to name the bigger light () and then I love thee"  In this phrase we can see that Caliban was first treated with love by Prospero because he fed him (with water with berries, like a special treat) and taught him how to name the sun (the bigger light).

Territory

When Caliban grows up, he realizes that Prospero was not like a father, he becomes aware of the fact that Prospero is the colonizer that took what belong to Caliban (His island).

"The island's mine, by Sycorax my mother, which thou takest from me"

What Caliban means here is that the Island has always been his by right, because it belong to his mother, and he accuses Prospero of taking it from him. This is what happens with Colonizers, they take a land (and the people that live in it)  although they have no right over it, but from their position of power they dominate the Colonized.

Slavery

Prospero is mad because he believes that Caliban is his slave and that he is not capable of doing good things, because he is less than a human being.  "Abhorred slave, Which any print of goodness wilt not take, Being capable of all ill"

Language

Prosperos is also angry because he claims that it was hard work for him to teach Caliban to speak "Took pains to make thee speak, taught thee each hour one thing or other..."

This is interesting because colonized populations have a language of their own, so there is nothing generous about Colonizers teaching the colonized to speak. In fact, language is a tool that is used by Colonizers to control the Colonized.

Through language people can be controlled and their identity is also distorted when they use a language that is not their own. Caliban recognizes that Prospero knows how to name things (as we stated at the beginning) but notice how he calls Caliban in different parts of this extract you included: "Abhorred slave" , "Savage" , "a thing most brutish" "Thou vile race" In this way, we see that Caliban wants to get rid of the identity Prospero ascribed to him, but at the same time he can't fight against the power of the Colonizer (that is, Prospero)

Caliban's answer to this insults is: "You taught me language; and my profit on't is that I know how to curse. The red plague rid you for learning me language!"  This means (literally) for the only thing that your language is helpful to me is to insult you (the red plague rid you! is an insult) But from the point of view of literary criticism, we see that Caliban is using the language that was originally used to control him, to fight against the control of Prospero. So, the same weapon that the Colonizer used to exert power over the Colonized, the latter uses it to fight against his control.

Explanation:

Found another answer to this on so just take whatever u need from this hope it helps man

ronaldo22
ronaldo22
4,4(28 marks)

"You must keep the rules" would be the other (active) way of saying this sentence.

Explanation:

"When a sentence is in the active voice, the subject of the sentence is the one doing the action expressed by the verb. In the passive voice, the subject is the person or thing acted on or affected by the verb's action."

"Rules must be kept" is a passive sentence to begin with. The active version would be "you must keep the rules" or "you must keep rules," depending on the context of the sentence.

Popular Questions about the subject: English

Deception is the opposite of : falsehood trickery frankness finesse...
English
08.05.2022 17:23
Please answer correctly...
English
28.08.2020 06:34
Do your work after you your lunch. * E. has taken C. taking D. have...
English
18.10.2020 16:03
Select the sub-genres of non-fiction biography history graphic memoir...
English
06.02.2021 07:26

New questions by subject

How would you explain all four ways of factoring polynomials?...
Mathematics
18.02.2020 22:47
What did the united states do in china once they were allied with soviet...
History
16.03.2020 07:37
What is the momentum of a 15 kg tire rolling down a hill at 3 m/s?...
Biology
20.07.2021 13:00
Which features involve tension? select the two correct answers. a. divergent...
Geography
17.10.2022 10:25
According to the food plate, which of these foods make up the smallest...
Health
09.09.2021 19:35
Why didn t adolf hitler sign the truce with stalin?...
History
01.02.2020 21:32
Remove brackets and simplify a1/2(a1/2-2)...
Mathematics
22.05.2021 12:05
Was it right for the us government to allow torture of suspects captured...
History
25.05.2021 16:31
#
#
#
#
# #

We expand our knowledge with many expert answers