English, asked by meenalawas, 3 months ago

what are the tragic elements producing humour in the play the tempest

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Answers

Answered by mohanddr
0

Answer:

The Tempest is a tragic comedy because there are elements of both tragedy and comedy in the story.

Tragedy in literature comes from unfortunate events befalling the characters, either through no fault of their own or as a result of their actions. Generally, in a tragedy, the audience identifies with characters that are experiencing difficulties. Before the beginning of the play, tragedy befell Prospero when his position was usurped by his brother. More tragedy happens when the people on the boat hit the tempest and land on the island. Even though the play ends in a good place for many of the characters, it takes tragic circumstances to arrive there.

Comedy, by modern day's standards, is amusing. It's something that can make the audience laugh and defy situational expectations. For example, Caliban throws himself toward Stephano as his new master and says things like "Let me lick thy shoe." Even though Caliban is a tragic character, he can still provide humor depending on the production....

Answered by ratnala380
2

Answer:

Shakespeare’s plays have been variously interpreted by literary scholars. Some of his plays have been dubbed as romances. The Tempest is critically acclaimed as the finest form of romance with the admixture of both the comic and tragic elements. Thus, ‘tragi-comedy‘ is an apt epithet for The Tempest.

Such literary genre appeared in the first decade of seventeenth century in England. Phillip Sidney, an eminent Elizabethan scholar, scornfully rejected tragi-comedy as a mongrel form in his Apology for Poetry. According to Aristotle and his followers tragedy mainly dealt with princes and noblemen whereas comedy dealt with the people of lower classes. Shakespeare evinced his adroit art of weaving serious matter along with amusing situations in The Tempest. It is, therefore, a convincingly etched out tragi-comedy.

The striking feature of The Tempest is its plot structure finely balanced with the blending of tragic earnestness and comic laughter. In the opening scene a superb levity is maintained by juxtaposing both the serious and the comical jocularity. We witness a ship being tossed by the sea-waves because a heavy gale is blowing. All the passengers are in utter danger as they find themselves faced with impending calamity. No doubt, such precarious situation is a serious matter. But Shakespeare’s dramatic art quite convincingly introduces witty quips uttered by Gonzalo who ridicules the boatswain:

I have great comfort from this fellow: methinks he hath no drowning mark upon him; his complexion is perfect gallows.

Likewise, Act one Scene two begins with an atmosphere pervaded by sadness as Prospero gives his daughter a detailed account of misfortunes which he had experienced owing to the perfidy of his brother Antonio:

My brother, and thy uncle, call’d Antonio,– I pray thee, mark me, that a brother should / Be so perfidious

Herein lies the unsurpassed theatrical art of the dramatist; such sentimental effusion induces within us an emergence of fellow-feeling with Prospero. Such harrowing tale of Prospero intensifies tragic gloom and elucidates the reason behind Prospero’s arrival in the island. The atmosphere is tempered with the love-making between Ferdinand and Miranda. Thus shakespeare’s ingenious method of introducing the twin strands of tragic and comic impulse is extraordinary:

They are both in either’s pow’rs: but this swift business/ I must uneasy make, lest too light winning / Make the prize light

Act two Scene one is a combination of joyful mirth and tragic gloom. Apart from Alonso’s grief over the supposed death of his son, the scene is almost peculiar to festive comedy. We enjoy boundless enjoyment at the expense of Gonzalo who is assailed with sarcastic remarks by both Antonio and Sebastian. Moreover, we laugh a lot at Gonzalo’s absurd comment of ideal commonwealth:

All things in common Nature should produce / Without sweat or endeavour. Treason, felony, / Sword, pike, knife, gun, or need of any engine, / Would I not have;but Nature should bring forth, / Of it own kind, all foison, all abundance, / To feed my innocent people.

Such comic pleasure is definitely a fine stratagem on the part of the playwright to bring forth jovial spirit of comedy. Also, a serious note creeps out when we see Antonio prevails upon Sebastian to agree to the assassination of Alonso and Gonzalo.

Act two Scene two is merely farcical and most amusing, as we find Trinculo and Stephano come upon Caliban who is a hilariously looking monster indulging in drunken revelry.

Act three is mostly a romantic scene but there is still vivid the vein of comedy when we see to find the concourse of Caliban, Stephano and Trinculo, and their subsequent conversation is amusing enough to entertain

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