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"A Strange Fish:" Love and Fear of the Strange in Shakespeare’s The Tempest - Siddhartha Jassar Minhas

Columbia University
2026
William Shakespeare
The Tempest
Hamlet
early modern literature
Renaissance Literature
colonialism
Strangeness
Otherness
literary studies
English Literature
Medieval Travel Writing
Sir John Mandeville
Christopher Columbus
Amerigo Vespucci
Jamestown
Exploration
cultural identity
Psychology Of Fear
European History
Colonial Encounters
Travel Narratives
Literary Criticism
cultural studies
postcolonial studies
Mythology
representation
Early Modern England
Shakespeare Studies
Renaissance History
Mediterranean
New World
Perception
Human Geography
Cultural Imagination
Historical Literature
English Drama
Comparative Literature
Political Imagination
identity
Foreignness
narrative theory
symbolism
Human Experience
Colonial History
Literature And Society
Fear And Fascination
Language And Meaning
Historical Memory
Global Relations
Interpretation

This thesis examines representations of “strangeness” in The Tempest and their historical roots in medieval travel writing and early colonial exploration. By analyzing how Shakespeare constructs fear and fascination toward unfamiliar places and peoples, the research argues that strangeness is not inherent, but psychologically and culturally produced.

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