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Examples Of Colonialism In The Tempest And Robinson Crusoe

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The Tempest and Robinson Crusoe : The Castaway as a Pro-Colonial figure.

Through the figure of the castaway The Tempest and Robinson Crusoe engages readers to accept that colonialism is a good venture to pursue. Both narratives show that despite being secluded on an island that European Colonialism is inevitable as it’s shown to be of the human condition. The Castaway figures themselves seem to embody the vision of colonialism through actions and though throughout their stories. Both novels support the four main features of Colonial narrative; The control of natural resources for economic gain, the exploitation of people and nature, through labour for personal gain, the insistence of hieratical structure through restriction and supply of knowledge and the maintenance of European cultural ideological values as to not descend into what they term “savagery”.
Colonialism is established for the retrieval of resources to further benefit the colony and grow the nation. The strict narration of all belongings we find kept by Crusoe throughout his term on the island shows the colonists mindset of economic control through possession as his driving force. Even before the shipwreck, while living upon his plantation in Brazil he is a studious book keeper and prioritises his assets compulsively along with the monetary gain he will benefit from them. As Defoe himself was a merchant trader, it is only expected that we find Crusoe, a merchant, to be diligent in his recordings. Jacob Sider notes that Crusoe embodies a “parabolic representation of economic concepts and ideologies.” (Sider Jort, Jacob)
In The Tempest the natural resources Prospero collects are that of the inhabitants on the island. He exploits those around him to gain status and to grow his magical abilities. He doesn’t view either Caliban or Ariel as people, more as commodities. Stephano and Trinculo refer to Caliban as “fish”, “savage” and “monster” further announcing him as unhuman to European eyes. Ariel is kept by Prospero as his magical ‘familiar’, he commandeers Ariels natural abilities to control natural and magical phenomena to benefit his own gain and advance his nefarious plot to restore his Dukedom.
Both parties endeavours to increase their wealth

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