Shakespeare introduced the relationship between Prospero and Calvin in the stormy Stakes of Shakespeare on a small island between Tunisia and Naples. Although the theater was originally based on Prospero, he was a Duke of Milan, he was the father of love for Miranda and the inhabitants of the island for the past 12 years, and was robbed of his planned brother Antonio. When Prospero and Miranda came here when exploring the relationship between Prospero and Caliban, it was necessary to consider some aspects of the relationship between Prospero and Caliban.
In the storm, it was a storm relationship between Caliban and Prospero. When Prospero arrived at the island he put the Caliban under his wings and taught him language and other skills in exchange for the service of Caliban. When Caliban tried to rape Miranda, the relationship got very bad, Prospero ruthlessly treated the Caliban. Shakespeare skillfully demonstrated the ambiguity of this relationship by giving reasons to sympathize Prospero and Calvin with the audience or despise.
If there is a relationship between master and slave, there are many power supply conflicts. Shakespeare 's storm shows the master - slave relationship between Prospero and Calvin where power and authority are contested. Prospero is the owner, and Calvin is the slave. These positions are not coincidental results but results of force. Prospero took the island of the Caribbean and claimed that it was his own island. Then he took him for his freedom and forced him to serve him. He did this because it was that Kariban had to confess that she tried raping her daughter, but his punishment was for reasons of self-control and not for justice. The only reason Prospero dominates the Caribbean is the supernatural power he abuses. According to Jesus' priest Anotonio Vieira, Prospero 'should be sent to hell'.
Introduction William Shakespeare's "Storm" tells the story of Prospero on the island with his daughter Miranda. What lives on the island is an ugly monster called Ariel and Caribbean. Miranda, Ariel and the Caribbe are essentially different. However, Prospero has a tendency to cause all these things on the island. Through the Caribbean and Miranda, in particular Shakespeare shows that education and cultivation influence people's true nature and self. How is NURTURE VS. NURTURE culture cultivated and promoted?
First of all, Shakespeare introduced the words "nature" and "raising" in "Arashi". Prospero expressed the Caribbean as "a demon whose nature is never protected." The natural concept of conflict with cultivation is the driving force of nurturing that Darwin's cousin Francis Garton (1865) used more than a century ago. Galton believes that "nobody can get rid of this conclusion, that is, nature occupies a large position in cultivation" (1883, p. 241). Adding these two words creates fission that is derived from the longest controversial argument in behavioral science. Natural hyphens suggest implicit conjunction "contrast". The proper combination of nature and cultivation is "and".