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Nov 2013
41m 59s

The Tempest

Bbc Radio 4
About this episode

Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss Shakespeare's play The Tempest. Written in around 1610, it is thought to be one of the playwright's final works and contains some of the most poetic and memorable passages in all his output. It was influenced by accounts of distant lands written by contemporary explorers, and by the complex international politics of the early Jacobean age.

The Tempest is set entirely on an unnamed island inhabited by the magician Prospero, his daughter Miranda and the monstrous Caliban, one of the most intriguing characters in Shakespeare's output. Its themes include magic and the nature of theatre itself - and some modern critics have seen it as an early meditation on the ethics of colonialism.

With:

Jonathan Bate Provost of Worcester College, Oxford

Erin Sullivan Lecturer and Fellow at the Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham

Katherine Duncan-Jones Emeritus Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford

Producer: Thomas Morris.

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