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All British Literature Videos 53 videos

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ELA 12: Hurricane-Strength Winds 18717 Views


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Description:

The Tempest is all about disruptions of everything from weather to power and political systems. Like most weather events in literature, this storm holds tons of Symbolic Meaning™.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

William Shakespeare's play The Tempest begins with a big violent windy

00:07

storm. I mean a tempest. go figure. enjoy good thing he fit that scene into [crops blow in the wind]

00:13

the play otherwise he might have had some very angry theater goers demanding

00:16

refunds for their tempest free experience.

00:19

however this storm is more than just your average devastating weather event.

00:22

it not only tells us a lot about where the main characters but touches on one

00:26

of the plays major themes. a lot more information than you're likely to get

00:30

from your local weather forecast there. well even if they include the seven-day

00:34

outlook. sorry. ok let's start with the origin of the tempest. doesn't just come [woman gives 7 day forecast]

00:39

about by center of low-pressure surrounded by a system of high pressure.

00:44

well this tempest is a bit less sciency and a bit more magical. it's summoned by

00:49

Prospero a powerful sorcerer. and he didn't just create it to play an

00:54

elaborate game of water polo against a sorcerer on a different Island. although

00:57

you know he thought about it that'd be kind of cool. nope Prospero summons the

01:01

tempest in order to shipwreck the King of Naples on his island. not exactly the

01:06

best way to make someone feel welcome as. you might expect [frowning king stands on island]

01:09

Prospero's desire to shipwreck the king didn't just come out of nowhere, he

01:13

wasn't just bored. well the King Alonso and Prospero, his brother Antonio ended up

01:18

deposing Prospero as the Duke of Milan and stranding him on the island with his

01:23

daughter for 12 year0s. though if you're looking for a way to externalize 12

01:26

years of anger and suffering well you can hardly do better than whipping up a

01:29

terrifying tempest. but despite Prospero's anger he has his limits. even

01:34

though he causes a shipwreck he doesn't make the storms so severe that anyone [battered boat bobs in the wind]

01:38

dies. it might be bitter, controlling, and have a deep desire for revenge but the

01:43

guy's not evil. probably, well The Tempest not only tells

01:46

us what's up with Prospero but also touches on the idea of social upheaval,

01:50

once the boats in the thick of the storm the talk on deck takes a certain tone.

01:55

Duke Antonio starts yelling orders but the bosun basically tells the do

02:01

keep the orders to himself. that's kind of language - Duke is accustomed pick [sailor talks to the Duke]

02:04

hearing from his inferiors even if it is a bit windy out. but that's kind of the

02:09

point. although the characters in The Tempest usually live under a strict

02:13

social and political hierarchy where everyone set in their place, all it takes

02:17

is some bad weather to shake things up. kind of makes you wonder how rock-solid

02:21

that hierarchy was. [minions picketing]

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