Who else is "Hagseed" in Margaret Atwood's book?
58:18 - Clickview
The Tempest Annotated: Click here
View Tempest: Click here
Act 2 Scene 2: Click here
Compare to p22 in Booklet.
Booklet: Click here
Shakespeare’s Caliban accepts subjugation, simply changing who rules him.
Atwood’s version rejects subjugation altogether. The line “Don’t need no master” is a direct rebellion against the colonial hierarchy — no master, no servitude.
The inmates, playing Caliban, are not just echoing his voice — they’re rewriting it to empower themselves.
Students write some TEPAs based on what we have discussed yesterday (p22 in booklet).
Complete PEEL Paragraph: Click here
Students gather ideas for their PEEL paragraphs.
IDEAS FOR POINT SENTENCES: Click here
IDEAS FOR EXPLORING COLONIAL POWER: Click here
Why has Margaret Atwood re-written The Tempest?
Article: Must read
Consider revisiting Atomi:
Students look through "Marginalisation" in "The Tempest" (Atomi work) and complete quizzes and TEPAs based on what they read.
FOCUS: Tempest, Hagseed and Power
The booklet contains information on the theme of Power within the Tempest and Hagseed.
Booklet: Click here