Caliban and The Tempest
I have never really liked this play or really ever understood it. I especially don't get Caliban. It seems like he finally has the chance to be free from Prospero and he puts himself right back into serventude with someone else, yeah they treat him better, but they keep calling him monster. Also is he part fish? I kind of had the impression that he looks like a man. I guess because he has never been free in any point of his life he doesn't know how to have conrol of his own life.

Is there a particular passage you want to talk about? Remember that the "agenda item" assignment ask you to include a quotation from the text and a specific comment about that quotation.
What does Caliban stand to gain from joining up with Trinculo and Stefano? See what he suggests that Trinculo and Stefano do in III.ii