Shakespearean Fractals of British Indian History

(2021).ย Performing Calibanesque Baptisms: Shakespearean Fractals of British Indian History.ย Multicultural Shakespeare.ย 23ย (38), 59-74.


This paper uncovers new complexity for Shakespearean studies in examining three anecdotes overlooked in related historiographyโ€”the first Indian baptism in Britain, that of Peter Pope, in 1616, and its extrapolation in Victorian history as Calibanesque; the tale of Catherine Bengall, an Indian servant baptised in 1745 in London and left to bear an illegitimate child, before vanishing from Company records (like Virginia Woolfโ€™s invention Judith Shakespeare vanishing in Shakespeareโ€™s London); and the forgotten John Talbot Shakespear, a Company official in early nineteenth-century Bengal and descendant of William Shakespeare. I argue that the anecdotal links between Peter, Caliban, Catherine, Judith, Shakespear and Shakespeare should be seen as Jungian effects of non-causal โ€œsynchronicโ€ reality or on lines of Benoit Mandelbrotโ€™s conception of fractals (rough and self-regulating geometries of natural microforms). Although anecdotes and historemes get incorporated into historical establishmentarianism, seeing history in a framework of fractals fundamentally resists such appropriations. This poses new challenges for Shakespearean historiography, while underscoring distinctions between Shakespeareanism (sociological epiphenomena) and Shakespeare (the man himself).

Shakespeare; Caliban; Peter Pope; Indians in London; Elizabethan Stage;

search previous next tag category expand menu location phone mail time cart zoom edit close