Title of article
The Interdependency of Foucauldian Concepts of Power and Knowledge in Shakespeare’s The Tempest
Author/Authors
Benoud ، Saeid Islamic Azad University Shahr-e-Rey Branch
Pages
16
From page
89
To page
104
Abstract
Shakespeare’s The Tempest is an outstanding theatrical microcosm representing the unavoidably overwhelming Foucauldian power relations in all human civilizations and their intricate interdependency of such power relations with the possession of knowledge and construction of reality. The fictional world of The Tempest is thoroughly endowed with the mechanisms of an intense web of power struggles and domination fixations which typically have been, are, and will be characteristic of any human society throughout history. For the sustenance of such a complex texture of power structures and for the manipulation of the overall balance to the advantage of a specific minority, the pivotal function of a constructed reality is as substantial in the story as the real life. Prospero, the central character, successfully manages to subdue all other dangerous, powerthirsty rivals by making use of his superior knowledge enabling him to shape the subjectivities/beliefs of other characters by different means including language and masquerades in an induced world of realities on the island. Shakespeare’s text can well be drawn on to reveal the stealthy workings of different social, cultural and especially moral institutions in recruiting subjects to their malignant power/knowledge network and duping the individuals with the desired notions produced constantly by the institutional apparatuses leading to the construction of an exploitive ‘truth.’
Keywords
Power , Knowledge , Panopticon , language , visibility , Subjugation
Journal title
Contemporary Literary and Cultural Studies
Serial Year
2018
Journal title
Contemporary Literary and Cultural Studies
Record number
2466835
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