Chapter 1: | Caliban, Shakespeare’s Transformative Other |
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Walder’s statement is relevant to the discussion about the relationship between Prospero and Caliban. This idea also complements what Ashcroft perceives as one of the purposes for the use of a postcolonial perspective. Ashcroft writes that postcolonial interpretations of the colonial process “is precisely the production that occurs through colonialism” since the process of decolonization does not erase the effects colonial empire has had on Caliban’s development (12). Therefore, Walder and Ashcroft both argue that Caliban’s use of the official narratives and juxtaposing it with that of colonized subjects allows him to control his own voice. This counter-discourse, then, will deconstruct any previous interpretation of the native subject. This practice by Caliban will be present in Reinaldo Arenas’ own attempts at counterattacking the ideologies of the Revolution.
Rey Chow poses a series of questions that add to the arguments presented by Dennis Walder and Bill Ashcroft. She asks,