The conceptual figures of Ariel and Caliban in the Shakespearen kaleidoscope of The Tempest an their French and Latin American reception. The barbaric and the civilized through Renan, Darío and Rodó

In 1898, across his text called “Triunfo de Calibán. Visiones de América” (“Victory of Caliban. Visions of America”), Rubén Darío appropriated the conceptual character of Caliban for his own cultural discourse, not devoid of strong polemic strength in the context of the war of Cuba and the emergency...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Naishtat, Francisco
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Centro Universitario Regional Zona Atlántica - Universidad Nacional del Comahue - Argentin 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://revele.uncoma.edu.ar/index.php/Sociales/article/view/1487
Aporte de:
id I22-R128-article-1487
record_format ojs
institution Universidad Nacional del Comahue
institution_str I-22
repository_str R-128
container_title_str Repositorio de Revistas Electrónicas REVELE (UNComahue)
language Español
format Artículo revista
topic Ariel
Caliban
Modernity
Reason
Barbarism
Civilization
Ariel
Caliban
Modernidad
Razón
Barbarie
Civilización.
spellingShingle Ariel
Caliban
Modernity
Reason
Barbarism
Civilization
Ariel
Caliban
Modernidad
Razón
Barbarie
Civilización.
Naishtat, Francisco
The conceptual figures of Ariel and Caliban in the Shakespearen kaleidoscope of The Tempest an their French and Latin American reception. The barbaric and the civilized through Renan, Darío and Rodó
topic_facet Ariel
Caliban
Modernity
Reason
Barbarism
Civilization
Ariel
Caliban
Modernidad
Razón
Barbarie
Civilización.
author Naishtat, Francisco
author_facet Naishtat, Francisco
author_sort Naishtat, Francisco
title The conceptual figures of Ariel and Caliban in the Shakespearen kaleidoscope of The Tempest an their French and Latin American reception. The barbaric and the civilized through Renan, Darío and Rodó
title_short The conceptual figures of Ariel and Caliban in the Shakespearen kaleidoscope of The Tempest an their French and Latin American reception. The barbaric and the civilized through Renan, Darío and Rodó
title_full The conceptual figures of Ariel and Caliban in the Shakespearen kaleidoscope of The Tempest an their French and Latin American reception. The barbaric and the civilized through Renan, Darío and Rodó
title_fullStr The conceptual figures of Ariel and Caliban in the Shakespearen kaleidoscope of The Tempest an their French and Latin American reception. The barbaric and the civilized through Renan, Darío and Rodó
title_full_unstemmed The conceptual figures of Ariel and Caliban in the Shakespearen kaleidoscope of The Tempest an their French and Latin American reception. The barbaric and the civilized through Renan, Darío and Rodó
title_sort conceptual figures of ariel and caliban in the shakespearen kaleidoscope of the tempest an their french and latin american reception. the barbaric and the civilized through renan, darío and rodó
description In 1898, across his text called “Triunfo de Calibán. Visiones de América” (“Victory of Caliban. Visions of America”), Rubén Darío appropriated the conceptual character of Caliban for his own cultural discourse, not devoid of strong polemic strength in the context of the war of Cuba and the emergency of the United States as the new world power of the modern times. That was twenty years after the publication in France of Renan’s Caliban, suite de la Tempête (Caliban. Continuation of The Tempest. If Darío clearly suggests a continuity with Renan’s topic of the mass society, he introduced however a new opposition, missing in Renan’s own writings, which is the opposition between two models of modernity, the Greco-Latin modernity, personified by the Mediterranean Europe (France, Italy, Spain, Portugal) together with Latin America’s nations and the Anglo-Saxon modernity, personified by the nations of northern Europe and North America, principally the United States. José Enrique Rodo, through his Essay Ariel, deepened the ideas already developed by Darío, but however he shifted the gravity centre to the character of Ariel: in Rodo, as in Shakespeare’s Tempest, Ariel incarnates classical measure and classical reason, against the exorbitant aspects of Caliban. Now Rodo imagines a real triumph of Ariel, that is, of Latin civilization, against Dario’s triumph of Caliban. In this paper, in the context of the commemoration of Dario’s death, which occurred in 1916, and of the four centenary of Shakespeare’s death, we propose a constellation between Shakespeare’s Tempest, together with Renan, Darío and Rodo to deal with the notions of the barbarian and the civilized in the horizon of the question of modernity, the postcolonial and the emergence of the twenty century new superpower.
publisher Centro Universitario Regional Zona Atlántica - Universidad Nacional del Comahue - Argentin
publishDate 2017
url http://revele.uncoma.edu.ar/index.php/Sociales/article/view/1487
work_keys_str_mv AT naishtatfrancisco theconceptualfiguresofarielandcalibanintheshakespearenkaleidoscopeofthetempestantheirfrenchandlatinamericanreceptionthebarbaricandthecivilizedthroughrenandarioandrodo
AT naishtatfrancisco lasfigurasconceptualesdearielycalibanenelcaleidoscopioshakespereanodelatempestadydesurecepcionfrancesaylatinoamericanalobarbaroylocivilizadoatravesderenandarioyrodo
AT naishtatfrancisco conceptualfiguresofarielandcalibanintheshakespearenkaleidoscopeofthetempestantheirfrenchandlatinamericanreceptionthebarbaricandthecivilizedthroughrenandarioandrodo
first_indexed 2022-10-04T14:43:06Z
last_indexed 2022-10-04T14:43:06Z
bdutipo_str Revistas
_version_ 1764819788250480640