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list price: $8.95
edition:Paperback
category: Non-classifiable
published: Jan 2002
ISBN:9780921870937
publisher: Ronsdale Press

Generation of Caliban, The

by Jonathan Goldberg

tagged: non-classifiable
Description

In his University of British Columbia Sedgewick lecture for 2001, Professor Jonathan Goldberg explores the ways in which contemporary writers and critics have identified with Shakespeare's figure of Caliban in his play The Tempest as a means of exploring the relationship of the colonized to the colonizer. Examining the work of the great Barbadian novelist and critic George Lamming and others, Goldberg details the various ways in which contemporary writers have re-interpreted Caliban andthe language imposed on him. In its simplest articulation, language is seen merely as a means of exploiting the colonial – Caliban being able to use language only for cursing – but in its more sophisticated usage, language can be used by the colonized as a means of understanding their condition and as an opening to futurity. Nor is this "futurity" in terms of social relations only since, as Goldberg points out, Lamming imagines generation as outside the normal heterosexual roles. The readings of The Tempest offered by Lamming and others (including Sylvia Wynter and Michelle Cliff), Goldberg suggests, invite us to return to Shakespeare's play and to see in it new possibilities. Included also in the pamphlet are a number of black and white illustrations of Caliban, dating from a 1736 Hogarth to present-day stage representations, and a portrait of George Lamming.

About the Author
Jonathan Goldberg

Jonathan Goldberg is Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of English at Emory University in Atlanta, where he has directed the Studies in Sexualities Program since 2008. He is the author of many books, including Writing Matter, Sodometries, and Desiring Women Writing, and is the editor of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's posthumous 2012 book The Weather in Proust.

Contributor Notes

Jonathan Goldberg is Sir William Osler Professor of English Literature at the Johns Hopkins University. The author of seven books, he is known for his work in the Renaissance with such volumes as Endlesse Worke: Spenser and the Structures of Discourse (Johns Hopkins, 1981) as well as for his research on the connections between the Renaissance, Postmodernism and Queer Studies in books such as Voice Terminal Echo: Postmodernism and English Renaissance Texts (Methuen, 1986) and Sodometries: Renaissance Texts, Modern Sexualities (Stanford, 1992). He is also the editor of Queering the Renaissance (Duke, 1994) and Reclaiming Sodom (Routledge, 1994).

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