The storm is a drama with the theme of nature and civilization. It has a powerful theme including settlers and colonists' problems. For many people this script may be just a drama, but I have a story about what happens when nature and civilization collide. The role of Caliban represents a pure nature. Prospero's role is civilization. These characters can also be regarded as settlers or settlers. The relationship between them is a very complex and ongoing struggle, just like the relationship between colonizers and colonizers.
Shakespeare's rainstorm and Sezer's storm capacity are defined as having control, authority, or influence over others. In William · Shakespeare 's Tempest and Aime · Sesia' s Tempest, power is an important element in relationship between characters. When Kariban and Prospero competed for domination of the island, Miranda knew that she had some degree of her own strength as she grew from an innocent young man to a sexy and strong young woman with a strong will. Some people are seen as victims of the necessity of Prospero's control, others have both content and charisma, but this transformation has influenced her growth and has grown up to adults . Miranda
Introduction William Shakespeare's "Storm" is the story of Prospero who was on the island with her daughter Miranda. Living in the island is a soul called Ariel and an ugly monster called caliban. Miranda, Ariel and Calvin differ in character. However, Prospero had a tendency to raise all of these on the island. Through Caliban and Miranda in particular, Shakespeare shows that education and cultivation can influence people's true nature and self. NURTURE VS. NURTURE How is culture cultivated or promoted?
When Prospero expressed Cariban as "a devil whose nature does not exist", Shakespeare introduced the words "nature" and "raising" first in "Arashi." The natural concept of confrontation with breeding is the driving force that nurtures nature, which has been used more than a century ago by Darwin's cousin Francis Galton (1865). Galton believes that "no one can get rid of this conclusion, that nature has occupied a large position in cultivation" (1883, p. 241). By adding these two words, there will be a breakup that enters the longest discussion in the behavioral science. The original hyphen suggests an implicit conjunction "contrast". The proper combination of nature and cultivation is "and".
Can you separate nature from cultivation? Strangely, the word itself "natural or cultivated" is the word of Shakespeare itself. It comes from the storm of Prospero Island where they suffered a shipwreck, of course you live in this terrible little monster called Caliban and one of the Prospero crew sailors who are trying to be kind personally to Calvin Said: "In your dirty nature, parenting never sticks." In other words, you are so badly born that we can not do anything about it. Well, my advice is that this is actually a desperate and rustic view of nature and how it fosters jobs - they always work together. This is a shameful view as it actually leads to very bad political policy.