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Are We Being Historical Yet
Materials for the Construction of Shakespeare's Morals, the Stoic Legacy to the Renaissance Major Ethical Authorities. Indexed According to Virtues, Vices, and Characters from the Plays, as well as Topics in Swift, Pope, and Wordsworth.
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Ariel's Way
A musical inspired by Shakespeare's The Tempest.
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Colonial mimicry
Bringing "this monstrous birth to the world's light": Colonial mimicry in early modern writing.
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Internet Archive - Allen Ginsberg: The Tempest (class 1)
A class on the play. At the outset, Ginsberg explains that instead of reading the whole play through, he will touch on important lines in each Act and scene and explore them deeply. In this recording he discusses Act I scene 1 and 2 with various digressions and explications on Shakespeare's metaphores, Aristotle's poetic and dramatic theories, Ezra Pound's four parts of poetry, and Ginsberg's own poetic influences from Shakespreare with asides about other authors.
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Internet Archive - Allen Ginsberg: The Tempest (class 2)
A continuation of a class on Shakespeare's Tempest, Allen Ginsberg draws parallels between Gregory Corso and Shakespeare, reading verse by both authors. Later Allen goes deeper into the text of Act I of Shakespeare's Tempest. This is class 2 of 4.
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Internet Archive - Allen Ginsberg: The Tempest (class 3)
A class on Shakespeare's Tempest, taught by Allen Ginsberg, from August 20, 1980 at Naropa. At the outset, Ginsberg explains that instead of reading the whole play through, he will touch on important lines in each Act and scene and explore them deeply. In this recording he discusses Act III scenes 1 through 3 with various digressions and explications on Shakespeare's metaphores. This is class 3 of 4.
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Internet Archive - Allen Ginsberg: The Tempest (class 4)
At the outset of the class, Ginsberg explains that instead of reading the whole play through, he will touch on important lines in each Act and scene and explore them deeply. In this recording he discusses Act IV scenes 1 through 3 with various digressions and explications on Shakespeare's metaphores and quotes from Elizabethan poets, Calderon's La Vida Es Sueno and Henry King's image of a bubble.
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Prospero's Speech
"Loreena McKennitt sings Prospero's last speech of The Tempest (Epilogue1-20). This track is from The Mask and Mirror album. It is both haunting and beautiful."
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The Tempest
"Theweleit comes up with the noteworthy theory that Shakespeare's The Tempest, usually viewed as a play about nature and art, the Golden Age and civilization, is in fact about America and questions of colonization. ..."
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No Fear Shakespeare: The Tempest
Puts Shakespeare's language side-by-side with a facing-page translation into modern English — the kind of English people actually speak today. Complete text of the printed book is available online on the publisher's website.
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