28 Feb 2005
Dabydeen, ''On Samaroo's Tempus Est...''
For a brief introduction to postcolonial readings of The Tempest, first look at this informal (non-academic) essay written for the Illinois Shakespeare Festival: "The Tempest" (by Elizabeth Reitz Mullenix).
Dabydeen, David. "On Samaroo's Tempus Est: The Earliest Colonial Rewriting of Shakespeare's The Tempest." EnterText 1:1 (2000). 17p. http://www.brunel.ac.uk/faculty/arts/EnterText/Dabydeen.pdf 21 Feb 2004.
Excerpt: To be posted later... Dabydeen's "Samaroo's Tempus Est."...
Weblog: Roamer's Zone
Tracked: February 25, 2005 02:38 AM
Excerpt: No wonder the works of Shakespeare are still around - Shakespeare managed to touch on personal issues that 400 years still have relevance. Our society today is COMPLETELY different but we still love, feel, hate, and more just like back...
Weblog: Literary Tease
Tracked: March 1, 2005 06:02 PM
Excerpt: *Look below for Wednesday's Articles* David Daybeen, kept my interest...I know this is pretty shocking, three posts on academic articles in a row and they all contain the word interesting! :-) Rewriting the Tempest I suppose I liked this article...
Weblog: Hm...Ill have to get back to you on that
Tracked: March 2, 2005 12:41 PM
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I think Dabydeen has some interesting things to say, namely in the editing details of The Tempest. Like how he says they switched lines from Miranda to Prospero. If that is true then it may have changed the meaning Shakespeare had intended. Even down to switching a letter (when Nicholas Rowe changed "wise" to "wife")
Posted by: Philmore Mills at February 28, 2005 10:07 AMI think Dabydeen has some interesting things to say, namely in the editing details of The Tempest. Like how he says they switched lines from Miranda to Prospero. If that is true then it may have changed the meaning Shakespeare had intended. Even down to switching a letter (when Nicholas Rowe changed "wise" to "wife")
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/mt/mt-tb.cgi/1228
Posted by: Philmore Mills at February 28, 2005 10:07 AMThanks for posting your thoughts here, Philmore. I note that you still seem to be having trouble with your personal weblog. Since you need that in two different classes, you should really come see me during my office hours.
Posted by: Dennis G. Jerz at February 28, 2005 10:51 AMHere's a link to my entry on this article (among others):
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/ChristopherUlicne/coursework/007838.html
Posted by: ChrisU at February 28, 2005 04:00 PM