Refracting The Tempest through the postcolonial lens: George Lamming’s water with Berries and Pleasures of Exile

Authors

  • Huma Javed Subzposh Professor, Department of English, DDU Gorakhpur University, Gorakhpur

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.64846/vrs1jr89

Keywords:

Postcolonialism, The Tempest, George Lamming, Caliban, Colonial Discourse, Language and Power, Caribbean Literature

Abstract

Aims: This paper aims to critically examine the postcolonial reinterpretation of Shakespeare’s The Tempest through the works of George Lamming, particularly Water with Berries and The Pleasures of Exile. It seeks to explore how the canonical text is reconfigured to interrogate colonial power structures, identity formation, and the enduring psychological impact of empire.

Methodology and Approaches: The study adopts a postcolonial theoretical framework, drawing on the insights of Frantz Fanon and Octave Mannoni to analyse the transformation of the Prospero–Caliban relationship.

Outcome: The analysis reveals that The Tempest operates both as a text that historically legitimises colonial discourse and as a fertile site for its subversion. Lamming’s rewriting foregrounds Caliban as a figure of resistance, while exposing the complexities of linguistic inheritance and psychological dependency. The reversal of colonial trajectories—from colony to metropolis—highlights the persistence of imperial power in altered forms within postcolonial realities.

Conclusion and Suggestions: The paper concludes that Lamming’s engagement with The Tempest extends beyond mere adaptation, offering a profound critique of colonial legacies that continue to shape cultural and intellectual identities. It suggests the need for further interdisciplinary studies that examine literary rewritings as dynamic sites of resistance and re-articulation, particularly in relation to language, memory, and postcolonial subjectivity. 

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Author Biography

  • Huma Javed Subzposh, Professor, Department of English, DDU Gorakhpur University, Gorakhpur

    Born on 28 January 1966, Dr. Huma Javed Subzposh is a senior academic in English literature with long teaching and research experience. She completed her graduation in 1983 and post-graduation in 1985 from Kanpur University, and qualified for the Junior Research Fellowship (JRF) in 1986. She joined Deen Dayal Upadhyay Gorakhpur University in April 1987 and has continued her association with the institution ever since, moving through the ranks from Lecturer to Professor, a position she has held since 2009. She was awarded her Ph.D. in 2001 and later the D.Litt. degree in 2015 from Lucknow University under the supervision of Prof. S.Z.H. Abidi. Her academic interests include postcolonialism, feminism, and the rewriting of classical texts, areas in which she has consistently worked through teaching, research, and publication. Dr. Subzposh is the author of The Disintegrating Psyche (2003), a study of Jean Rhys’s marginalised heroines, and has edited Literatures of South Asia (2016). In addition, she has published several research papers in journals and edited volumes, dealing with themes such as diaspora, postcolonial discourse, and feminist readings of literature. Over the years, she has supervised doctoral research and participated in a number of national and international seminars, where she has presented papers on contemporary literary issues. She has also contributed to university life through her involvement in academic and administrative bodies and by organising academic programmes and seminars. Her work reflects a steady engagement with literary studies, particularly in relation to South Asian writing and postcolonial criticism.

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Published

01.07.2025

How to Cite

1.
Refracting The Tempest through the postcolonial lens: George Lamming’s water with Berries and Pleasures of Exile. SPL J. Literary Hermeneutics: Biannu. Int. J. Indep. Crit. Think [Internet]. 2025 Jul. 1 [cited 2026 May 20];5(2):380-97. Available from: https://literaryherm.org/index.php/ojs/article/view/331

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