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Colonial Intelligibility and the Politics of Literacy: Language, Power, and the Making of the “Other” in The Tempest and Robinson Crusoe

- Colonial Intelligibility and the Politics of Literacy: Language, Power, and the Making of the “Other” in The Tempest and Robinson Crusoe -

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Colonial Intelligibility and the Politics of Literacy: Language, Power, and the Making of the “Other” in The Tempest and Robinson Crusoe

Md. Mahbubul Islam
English, Netrokona University, mahbubul.eng@neu.ac.bd

Nafisa Binte Rahman
Business Support, Essex County Council, UK, nafisa.rahman@essex.gov.uk


Publish Date: May 29, 2026

DOI: https://csg.ru.ac.bd/praxis/article/colonial-intelligibility-and-the-politics-of-literacy-language-power-and-the-making-of-the-other-in-the-tempest-and-robinson-crusoe/

Issue: 001

Page Number: 187-197

PDF: View PDF

Total Views: 12 Total Downloads: 1

Abstract

The portrayals of Friday and Caliban in William Shakespeare’s The Tempest and Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe have both been extensively analysed through the lens of postcolonialism, especially in terms of colonial power, slavery and identity. However, this study shifts the attention to a less explored but equally important dimension, the strategic denial to acknowledge their intellectual agency and literacy as a means of imposing colonial authority. Both texts illustrate how colonial subjugation is established not through physical domination, but through epistemic violence— silencing and misrepresenting the knowledge of the “Other” as unintelligible within the colonial discourses. In The Tempest, Prospero seizes authority by appropriating the island, displacing Sycorax and reducing Caliban to a symbol of savagery, despite his faculty for language and resistance. In Robinson Crusoe, Crusoe emphasises his dominion over Friday by refusing to engage with his indigenous identity or knowledge, deliberately framing him as innately inferior. This paper aims to expose that such eliminations are nothing but deliberate instruments of imperial politics, where only the coloniser’s language, reason and literacy are validated. This study, through a postcolonial interpretation, discloses how the construction of colonial intelligibility operates to dehumanise and intellectually reject the colonised subject in canonical English literature.

← Previous: “Almost the Same, but Not Quite”: Navigating Hybridity and the Third Space in Othello
Next: Gothic Fiction and the Racist Binary: Reevaluating the Feminist Aspects of Jane Eyre from a Postcolonial Lens →

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