Open Access Library Journal

Volume 12, Issue 5 (May 2025)

ISSN Print: 2333-9705   ISSN Online: 2333-9721

Google-based Impact Factor: 1.18  Citations  

The Two Witch Hunts by Shakespeare

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DOI: 10.4236/oalib.1113430    33 Downloads   147 Views  
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ABSTRACT

As Shakespeare’s final work, the existing theoretical literary research of The Tempest have mostly neglected the female character Sycorax, the sorceress, who has passed away and is presented in words of characters as a wicked old witch from North Africa. However, the protagonist Prospero has behaviors and experiences similar to those of Sycorax, whom he detests. They get different ends of life as magicians. It’s notable that Prospero’s attitude towards his political enemies who have exiled him and his daughter is quite different from that of his criticism of the unacquainted Sycorax and her descendant. He can put aside his hatred and share his past with his foes, but he resents Sycorax and her son Caliban almost unreasonably. The settings of Shakespeare’s two trials of literary witch hunting are designed to make the two magicians confront their own final end through trials, and only one survives. This article will take experiences and images of the two magicians as the primary point, to try to analyze their intrinsic similarities and differences, and then to clarify the reason why Shakespeare designed them in this way.

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Ji, J.X. (2025) The Two Witch Hunts by Shakespeare. Open Access Library Journal, 12, 1-11. doi: 10.4236/oalib.1113430.

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