Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Dr. Shahaal Second semester Drama (2) Fourth Year The play Our Town by Thornton Wilder is like a hymn (religious song) of the human experience. Post WWII drama: some dramatist of the 1930’s continued to produce similar works during the 1940’s and 1950’s. However, the theatrical landscape in Europe and the U.S. changed significantly after WWII ; this was a result of the emergence of so many political movements, or philosophical movements. Among the most influential post WWII movements was The Theatre of the Absurd, or the so called Existential Theatre. The Absurd started as a philosophy on the hands of Albert Camus, and the existentialist Jean Paul Sartre. The Absurd is a philosophy centered upon the analysis of existence of humanity, and stressing the freedom of Man and the isolation of the individual; is Man responsible for everything he does or he is not. After WWII, Man felt isolated, living in a world of alienation and isolation. In the years following WWII, the philosophy of Existentialism gained many followers in France and elsewhere. Existentialism argues that the universe contains no fixed set of moral codes )(ال تحكمه قيم أخالقية ثابتة, and each individual must create his own order and morality. Jean Paul Sartre and Albert Camus were the two leading philosophers of this movement; Existentialism and later on Absurdism. They wrote realistic drama of contemporary moral conflict )(صراع أخالقي و قيمي, such as the play Men Without Shadows (1949) by Sartre. Both Sartre and Camus believed that this universe of ours is controlled by a sense of irrationality; no order or reason. They created dramas which followed the traditional rules of rational construction and action of the play; however, the theme of the play was irrational. Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 1 Dr. Shahaal Second semester Around 1950, a new group of playwrights, much philosophically influenced by Camus and Sartre, created a revolution in European drama by taking the irrational for the existentialist into the structure and motivations of their plays; the thinking and the language of the characters were also irrational. How can the language be irrational? By not expressing any logical theme or consequence. According to them, the mind of the universe in this time is governed by some kind of irrational thinking. Thus, the language of their plays does not make any sense of communication. But this miscommunication, in the talking between people, does not really imply or express a kind of communication or revealing any kind of feeling; doesn’t lead to any results or fruitful consequences. The characters are talking, but their talking does not communicate any sense of logic, reason, or feelings. Although different in style, these dramatists share a rejection. The dramatists of that era, after 1940’s and 1950’s, rejected the traditional realistic drama. They introduced reality in their plays, but not the traditional realistic drama, a different kind of drama. This group came to be known as the Absurdist group; the term comes from a 1942 essay by Albert Camus, which called the human condition absurd. This is because humans continued to seek order, logic and reason in a universe that was not built on these principles; according to them, the universe is built on irrationality and disturbance. The most known and the most successful play of the Absurdist movement is Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett. The plays you will be studying are: Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett, Look back in Anger by John Osborne, and A Son, Come Home by Ed Bullins. In England, the Absurd theatre had a limited impact compared to the greater impact it had in Europe. However, similar playwrights were influenced by this kind of writing and adopted its approaches and principles; that the universe is controlled by irrational thinking. The international success of the Absurdist dramatists drew attention to dramatists who had taken part in earlier irrational movements. We had different non rational movements with writers that were very angry at the situation of the universe after WWI and WWII, which was a situation of disturbance, incompleteness, insecurity and irrational thinking. Therefore, British stage, after WWII, was reinvigorated Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 2 Dr. Shahaal Second semester by a new realism more concerned with social commentary, and depicting the lives of the lower classes (like the plays of Shaw which depicted the lives of the lower classes). Here, we have writers of this movement who were called the Angry Young Playwrights; they were angry at the political and social situation they were living after WWII. The name they got from the disillusioned protagonist of the first success in the new style Look Back in Anger (1956). The disillusionment indicates psychological and social disturbances. The protagonist in the play is a man of the lower classes who worked hard and studied hard and struggled in order to arrive at something. He finished his university degree and was trying to find a job but he could not; like the protagonist of the novel Jude The Obscure by Thomas Hardy. Thus the hero becomes angry at the other classes and at life. In America, the first half of the 20th century was dominated by the plays of Eugene O’Neill and Thornton Wilder. As for the second half of the 20th century, Anderson and Wilder continued to produce important works following WWII. But for the most praised older dramatist was O’Neil as we said. The dominant dramatists of the postwar years were Tennessee Williams and Arthur Miller. Both of them pursued the Ibsenian tradition of social drama in their most plays. E.g. Arthur Miller in his Death of a Salesman, he follows the tradition of Henrik Ibsen; he uses some touches of expression that appeared in the beginning of the 20th century, as well as symbolism, like Ibsen’s The Master Builder, by conveying parts of the story through the main characters memories. William also worked in the more general art of realism, addressing individual psychology more than social concerns. The reason for that was his perversion and deranged mind. His most famous plays were The Glass Menagerie and A Streetcar Named Desire. He was an even more influential American playwright than Arthur Miller. The term style, when it comes to drama, refers to the way in which a play is written, produced and acted. Dramatists should use the style of language that Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 3 Dr. Shahaal Second semester suits their ideas. Some productions are highly stylized. But in order to convey a particular interpretation, the writer, the director, and the producer blend costume, sceneries and lightning to create a special effect that is more abstract than realistic on the audience. The were eight styles that dominated the era. These styles were used, not only in plays and dramas, but they were used in novels: 1- Romanticism in the 19th century: started with the Lyrical Ballads by Coleridge and Wordsworth in (1798), ten years after the French Revolution. They became very popular in the first part of the 19 th century. Romanticism was a reaction against the strict rules of Classicism, with plays in which love was the primary theme. The plays and productions of Romanticism were highly imaginative; they presented an ideal, sometimes magical, world. like the plays of Shakespeare in which, Rosalind in The Tempest, for example is ideal, looking for the perfect love trying to educate her lover Orlando in the way that she thinks is ideal. 2- Realism came as a reaction against Romanticism. This dominant style of the 20th century takes an opposite approach. Realism in plays present life as it actually is; no imagination or fantasy, life the way it is. The characters talk and act as people in ordinary life do. The outcome of the play makes sense in the real world. The setting and scenery also contributed to the real life atmosphere. The best realistic playwright of that era was the Norwegian Henrik Ibsen, the father of Realism and modern playwriting. He introduced Realism in his plays, such as A Doll’s House, The Master Builder, ..etc. However, the playwright who introduced Realism into England and dominated the century was George Bernard Shaw. 3- Naturalism was a kind of Realism; it grew out of Realism and out of the idea that human beings have little self determination. Naturalism believes that Man is controlled by three main aspects: nature, society and heredity (inherited genes from ancestors). So, Naturalism, in response to forces of nature and society that are beyond their control. Some example of Naturalists is Emile Zola in France, Stephen Crane, Theodore Dreiser, Jack London, and Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 4 Dr. Shahaal Second semester Frank Norris in the U.S. Dreiser wrote a very important novel called Sister Carrie, and Zola wrote Nana. 4- Symbolism, in contemporary theatre, is likely to mean the use of one element, like a character, an object, or a piece of scenery to represent something else. E.g. Ibsen’s Wild Duck, The Master Builder or Synge’s Riders to the Sea. In Ibsen’s The Master Builder, ascending to the tower with dizzy heights is a symbol of the Master Builder’s unconsciousness; the play itself is symbolic. 5- Expressionism: the characters’ set of expressions tend to be distorted or over simplified, or characters become symbolic rather than realistic. The message of Expressionism is similar to that of Naturalism; it is often about the uselessness of human hopes and dreams in this universe. It is always in a negative and unhappy sense. According to Expressionism, whether you think or not, this world is a world of uselessness and is meaningless; dreams are not to be fulfilled because this world is governed and controlled by mechanistic forces that destroy Man and crush the individual. Here Man appears as having no will or freedom of will at all. One American example is the playwright Eugene O’Neil and his play The Hairy Ape 6- Epic theatre: first developed by Bertolt Brecht. In Epic Theatre characters are extended to become epic characters. Epic Theatre represents events in an episodic form; the individual or the hero passes into different events or episodes and how the character is capable of defeating them. The Epic Theatre is a reaction against emotionalism (Romanticism where Man becomes involved in his own emotions and gets lost in the world, like John Keats in his “Ode to Melancholy”) and naturalism (a world of pessimism and determinism where Man has no free will at all). But for Brecht, he believed that Man has free will and can do something that is useful. Brecht’s plays do not involve the spectators. Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 5 Dr. Shahaal Second semester Theatre of the Absurd The life and the action in an Absurd play is repetitive; the movement of the individual is meaningless and repetitive. Time becomes timelessness. The individual here feels that he is isolated in his own world. The only reality is his own individuality, and the only certainty is his own freedom. But, what kind of freedom? Being alienated from his own environment, the person’s action seems useless in a world that is absurd. The absurdity arises in the sense of incongruity; there is no harmony at all between his intentions or aspirations and the nature of his environment ) (طموحاته ال يمكن تحقيقها في هذا المجتمعbecause such society crushes the individual and his aspirations. Comedy here arises within a context of despair; the person becomes very desperate, and from his despair comes what is comic )(شر البلية ما يضحك. The situation is so damn harsh, bitter and panicking, but it makes you laugh; because things are persistent and repetitive, happening every day. The comic element reinforces the focus of the play, which gives us a picture of Man facing the void. The world becomes a world of no moral value, a world of void. Other Absurd Theatre plays have the following elements in the theme of the play: - Man is isolated and alienated. - The world is cruel - Nonsense, funfairing, triviality of Man’s struggle and actions - Triviality of conventional objects - Strong fantasy but all in void. Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 6 Dr. Shahaal Second semester Waiting for Godot The characters, only five: The two main characters are: Estragon and Vladimir. The other three characters are insignificant Estragon and Vladimir think of life as an exile )(حياة النفي و الوحدة, as if this exile is a punishment for being born. Estragon suggests an exile in time from the reality of their selves, which is a must be timeless; he moves in time, but this time is timeless. The time of the play is a timeless time because the time of yesterday is like the time of today, and it is so similar to the time of tomorrow. Therefore, time becomes repetitive and timeless: (عندما يصبح الزمان ليس الزمان و المكان ليس ) تصبح الحياة عقيمة جرداء..بالمكان و ال اإلنسان باإلنسان. The characters in the play think of themselves as spatial and dimensionless; exists horizontally. When you live horizontally, you move, but your movement has no meaning or result. But when you stand vertically, your feet touch the ground, standing in perpendicular way with you as a body that has its own form, and you start thinking of yourself in this void. The final turn in a series should determine a sense of order, but in Waiting for Godot, they are waiting and they keep on waiting, and they wait, and they move. But they move like from one room into another room. Thus, life becomes very repetitive moving in a state of void. Time here becomes timelessness, and their movement becomes useless. So, you need someone to deliver ) (يخلصكyou from this. The two characters Vladimir and Estragon are waiting for Godot. Godot is a symbol of the deliverer or the savior who never comes. Beckett’s preoccupation is to show that the movement and thoughts of the human being, in space and time, are unrelated to the reality of the universe. The essence of reality is finite or infinite. From the point of view of the Existentialist or the Absurdist, no one has came to tell what happened to them after they died. So, reality here is infinite ) (ال متناهية – ال حدود لها – ال معرفة لهاbecause they believe that our human Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 7 Dr. Shahaal Second semester minds has no power to go beyond the finite to the infinite. The infinite is unknown to us; God is infinite because we don’t know the reality of God. About Samuel Beckett (1906-1989): o He was an author, a critic, a playwright, and also a winner for Nobel prize in literature in 1966. He wrote in both French and English, and is best known for his plays such as Waiting for Godot. He was born in the suburbs of Dublin. From (1923 – 1927) he studied Romance languages and received a B.A in Romance languages (French – Spanish – Italian); the most musical Romance language is Italian. o He returned to Ireland in 1930 to take up a post as lecturer in French. After four terms he resigned and embarked on a period of restless travel. In 1937, Beckett decided to settle in Paris, and became a citizen of a country that was neutral in WWII; he was able to remain there even after the occupation of Paris by the Germans. He joined the underworld movement, a resistance group in 1941. When he received news that some of his friends were arrested, he immediately went into hiding, and gradually moved to the unoccupied zone of France where he worked as a laborer in agriculture. o In 1945, he returned to Ireland and volunteered for the Irish Red Cross. After that, he was back in France as an interpreter in a military hospital. some of his major works are: Murphy a novel on an Irish man, Waiting for Godot, and End Game. The best play that made Beckett’s fame is Waiting for Godot. o Beckett’s philosophical system is based on paradox (good and bad, night and day,..etc.). To him, thought is useless because it takes the individual nowhere. Thought to Beckett, can reveal nothing; thought is beyond the compass of the human mind. To Beckett, ultimate truth is beyond the compass of the human mind, so why should we think; we only do things repetitively. Truth does not exist in our world, and that’s why our life becomes hopeless, meaningless and helpless; one can tell that this universe is a universe of hopelessness, meaninglessness, and helplessness; a world of Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 8 Dr. Shahaal Second semester incomprehensibility. This sense of incomprehensibility leads the individual to his feeling or sense of pessimism. o Beckett dealt with human beings in such extreme situations. Not because he was interested in pessimism, or in disease, the aspect of human life; but because he concentrated on the essential aspect of the human existence, experience; the subject matter of so many war literature. Those who exist are those who make a change in life; like the prophet, great people in history, William Shakespeare…etc. Beckett asked questions on how we can come to terms with the fact of our existence; we have been thrown into this world, into being. What is the true nature of ourselves? What does a human being mean when he says I exist? Is the I of an oppressor? Is it an I that crushes the people? An I of a tyrannical figure? Or an I of a human being who is able to communicate with others as human beings? End … Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 9