The part of colonization has been quite underlined in the play. Colonization can be considered as the fundamental theme on the grounds that everything spins around the colonization in The Tempest. The play investigates the colonization angles between the European and the locals, generally African. The play considers the connection between Prospero, the Protagonist in the play, and Caliban who is the local tenant of the island.
At the point when Prospero relocated to the island in the wake of getting away from the wrath in her residential area, he met Caliban and Ariel as the main locals in the land. Prospero began taking control of everything in the land and directing each perspective. Regardless of meeting Caliban in the island, Prospero needed to control him. Prospero considered Caliban as being lesser than himself and he took administration from Caliban. Prospero took every one of the forces and considered Caliban as the second subject.
Prospero acquainted a new culture to the general population of the island and he also enslaved the only native person left in the land, Caliban. Prospero goes about as a portrayal of the Europeans who oppressed the local individuals of the land they vanquished and built up their way of life in the new land. Prospero kept loathing Caliban in the same manner in which other colonizers mistreated the people they conquered. This is depicted in the play by the torment that Caliban experienced.
Caliban felt the agony of being ruled over by Prospero in his own territory and decided to ravage in an attempt to rape Miranda, Prospero’s daughter. Additionally, racism is predominant where distinctive individuals get together. Alonso is condemned by Sebastian for accepting Ferdinand to marry someone who was regarded as an alien. Under those numerous angles that uncovers colonization, the book depicts the general colonization perspectives through characters interaction.
In the play, Prospero manipulates everything. Looking at the play in the eyes of post-colonialism, we see Caliban emerging against everything in it. Caliban disobeys the commands of Prospero and he even tells Prospero that he (Prospero) took the land that he (Caliban) was supposed to be ruling from him forcefully. Also, from the historical point of view, Caliban protest against Prospero is something that was born in by the colonization itself. In real sense, the land was taken away from Caliban and he was enslaved as if he was an alien to the land. The pain in Caliban is demonstrated when he says “I must eat my dinner. The land is mine, by Sycorax, my mother”.