"I look up to where I want to be. Up there, safe in the clouds and far away from Inishfree... And God has placed his hand around my shoulder. And me and God smile down on all my good work. It's going to be such a beautiful place, Lord. Such a beautiful place."
Inishfree might seem like a quaint Irish town, but fierce evangelist Thomas Magill knows better. He knows that jovial Dwain Flynn is a miserable drunk, that Timmy O'Leary enslaves his lovely mother, and that sweet Mrs Cleary is a blasphemous flirt. It is down to Thomas (and don't call him Tommy) with God on his shoulder, so save this sinful place. But the townsfolk are not listening, an angel is misbehaving and a barking dog will not be silenced. Just how far will Thomas go in his quest for salvation?
In his searing one-man play, Irish playwright Enda Walsh has anti-hero Thomas Magill portray the population of an entire town as he desperately, and sometimes violently, attempts to mould their religious identities to fit his own, whilst simultaneously developing his own identity as best he can within his relentless isolation. One could even argue that this young man is performing his own version of Genesis, by creating the world in his own image.
As always with Walsh, even the words themselves become kinetic throughout the play. Thomas’s monologue, while at first suggesting mere loneliness, is a combination of sacred and graphic imagery, with lofty biblical cadences wrestling with the nagging patterns of daily patter on petty subjects. His talk seesaws between heaven and hell, as do his actions. Magill, unable to establish even the most basic forms of human intercourse, aims to form a working community out of the inhabitants of Inishfree, not realising that he is the most isolated of them all.
Misterman - Identity Quotations
Friday, 11 May 2012
Thursday, 3 May 2012
The Obscenity Trial that Started a Revolution, and the Poem that Rocked a Generation. Wider Reading 20: Howl
Comprising 251 lines and nearly 3000 words, Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl” is truly a poem of epic proportions. Dedicated to his close friend Carl Solomon, Ginsberg recounts the stories of “the best minds of [his] generation”; poets, artists, political radicals, jazz musicians, drug addicts, and psychiatric patients who he encountered throughout the 1940s and 50s.
Throughout the poem, Ginsberg explores many aspects of an identity struggle, primarily that of homosexuals with the restrictive society of the 1950s. As a dedicated gay rights activist, Ginsberg was very concerned about the effect of closet homosexuality on those he knew. The individuals within the poem reflect this, and appear to seek escapism in drugs and illicit sexual activity.
The language is candid and graphic as the poet describes the scrapes and homosexual encounters experienced by those around him. So graphic, in fact, that the first public reading of his poem earned him an obscenity trial for his troubles. This was well-publicized. The judge ruled in favour of Ginsberg, however, stating that the poem was “of redeeming social importance,” and it went on to be one of the most widely read poems of the century, translated into more than twenty-two languages. Ginsberg went on to be one of the most influential individuals in the Beat generation of the 1950s.
Howl - Identity Quotations
Throughout the poem, Ginsberg explores many aspects of an identity struggle, primarily that of homosexuals with the restrictive society of the 1950s. As a dedicated gay rights activist, Ginsberg was very concerned about the effect of closet homosexuality on those he knew. The individuals within the poem reflect this, and appear to seek escapism in drugs and illicit sexual activity.
The language is candid and graphic as the poet describes the scrapes and homosexual encounters experienced by those around him. So graphic, in fact, that the first public reading of his poem earned him an obscenity trial for his troubles. This was well-publicized. The judge ruled in favour of Ginsberg, however, stating that the poem was “of redeeming social importance,” and it went on to be one of the most widely read poems of the century, translated into more than twenty-two languages. Ginsberg went on to be one of the most influential individuals in the Beat generation of the 1950s.
Howl - Identity Quotations
Saturday, 28 April 2012
Christopher and his Kind... Wider Reading 19: Goodbye to Berlin
Although The Diary of Anne Frank is considered by many to be the foremost manuscript on the subject of the holocaust, there are other texts which link in both form and content. The diaries of Christopher Isherwood which include Sally Bowles and A Berlin Diary, collectively titled as Goodbye to Berlin, also provide a first-hand account of Jewish mistreatment at the hands of the Nazi party, but this time through the eyes of an Englishman visiting the Weimar Republic’s capital during Hitler’s rise to power. Though the novelist himself experiences an identity struggle of a different kind, namely that of a Briton and homosexual in an increasingly anti-English/gay country, both Frank and Isherwood express their desire for the improvement of matters in their personal, and now famous diaries.
Isherwood is also well-known for rubbing shoulders with the famous English-American poet W.H. Auden, with whom he collaborated on three plays and became his literary mentor. It was Auden who compelled the writer to travel to Berlin in the first place, on the promise of a thriving, illicit sexual underworld populated by “boys.” It was here that Isherwood met his “first great love,” a young German boy named Heinz Neddermeyer. The pair left Berlin in 1933, he and Heinz moved around Europe, living in Copenhagen, Sintra and elsewhere. Heinz was arrested as a draft-evader in 1937 following a brief return to Germany after he was ejected from Luxembourg as an "undesirable alien". He was sentenced to six months in prison, a year of state labour and two years of compulsory military service.
Isherwood’s sexual orientation was of course shunned by his upper middle class upbringing. It was partly this reason that he travelled to the city which would provide so much of his artistic inspiration: being unable to express himself at home, he journeyed to Berlin due to its reputation for sexual freedom. The capital, at this time, was rapidly developing its own sense of identity. The fierce power and organisation of the Nazi party was empowering to the German people after the disaster of the Great War, and people voted for Hitler in their thousands. The increasing threat of war radiating from Britain gave many citizens a sense of antagonism towards anybody who was English, which forced Isherwood to leave to ensure his own safety and that of Heinz.
The stark clarity with which the writer records his experiences recalls the exact quality of a photograph, rather than a writer. Isherwood himself, in fact, recognised this, and begins his collection with the statement that:
“I am a camera with its shutter open, quite passive, recording, not thinking.”
Yours, Christopher
Isherwood is also well-known for rubbing shoulders with the famous English-American poet W.H. Auden, with whom he collaborated on three plays and became his literary mentor. It was Auden who compelled the writer to travel to Berlin in the first place, on the promise of a thriving, illicit sexual underworld populated by “boys.” It was here that Isherwood met his “first great love,” a young German boy named Heinz Neddermeyer. The pair left Berlin in 1933, he and Heinz moved around Europe, living in Copenhagen, Sintra and elsewhere. Heinz was arrested as a draft-evader in 1937 following a brief return to Germany after he was ejected from Luxembourg as an "undesirable alien". He was sentenced to six months in prison, a year of state labour and two years of compulsory military service.
Isherwood’s sexual orientation was of course shunned by his upper middle class upbringing. It was partly this reason that he travelled to the city which would provide so much of his artistic inspiration: being unable to express himself at home, he journeyed to Berlin due to its reputation for sexual freedom. The capital, at this time, was rapidly developing its own sense of identity. The fierce power and organisation of the Nazi party was empowering to the German people after the disaster of the Great War, and people voted for Hitler in their thousands. The increasing threat of war radiating from Britain gave many citizens a sense of antagonism towards anybody who was English, which forced Isherwood to leave to ensure his own safety and that of Heinz.
The stark clarity with which the writer records his experiences recalls the exact quality of a photograph, rather than a writer. Isherwood himself, in fact, recognised this, and begins his collection with the statement that:
“I am a camera with its shutter open, quite passive, recording, not thinking.”
Yours, Christopher
Wednesday, 25 April 2012
The Spirit of a Nation in Five People, Two Days, and One House. Wider Reading (Drama) 18: Dancing at Lughnasa
It is 1936 and harvest time in County Donegal. In a house just outside the village of Ballybeg live the five Mundy sisters, barely making ends meet, their ages ranging from twenty-six up to forty. The two male members of the household are Brother Jack, a missionary priest, repatriated from Africa by his superiors after twenty-five years, and the seven-year-old child of the youngest sister. In depicting two days in the life of this ménage, Brian Friel evokes not simply the interior landscape of a group of human beings trapped in their domestic situation, but the wider landscape, interior and exterior, Christian and pagan, of which they are nonetheless a part.
National identity is a topic frequently favoured by Irish playwrights and their work, and Dancing at Lughnasa (pronounced loo-nasa) is no exception. Ireland has always been one of the less affluent nations of Western Europe, but in 1936, trapped within the height of the world-wide Great Depression, that chronic economic hardship is aggravated. The village of Ballybeg is the playwright’s own fictional creation, and is the location of many of his plays. Donegal, on the other hand, is a real place, one of the counties making up the Republic of Ireland. Friel has deep personal connections with his place; as a child he spent an extensive amount of time there, summering with his mother's sisters, and he has since settled in Donegal himself.
In addition this personal significance, Donegal also occupies a distinctive place in the Irish national consciousness. The county is shrouded in romantic mystique, and has always lagged behind the rest of Ireland in terms of economic and social development. However, because of this economic backwardness, many of the customs, beliefs, and cultural practices of traditional Irish life have been preserved in Donegal. And it is in Donegal where the ancient festival of La Lughnasa is perhaps most vividly celebrated. The title of the play refers to the celebratory dancing associated with this pagan festival. The setting is thus a kind of mythical location, a small sanctuary of authentic Irish life that modernity has yet to reach. Or is it? As the narrator, states in the opening monologue, his memories of Ballybeg in the summer of ‘36 are full of "a sense of . . . things changing too quickly before my eyes." He recalls a "widening breach between what seemed to be and what was, of things . . . becoming what they ought not to be." It is the experience of change played out against the deeply traditional Donegal setting that provides much of the play's discord and pity.
Dancing at Lughnasa - Identity Quotations
National identity is a topic frequently favoured by Irish playwrights and their work, and Dancing at Lughnasa (pronounced loo-nasa) is no exception. Ireland has always been one of the less affluent nations of Western Europe, but in 1936, trapped within the height of the world-wide Great Depression, that chronic economic hardship is aggravated. The village of Ballybeg is the playwright’s own fictional creation, and is the location of many of his plays. Donegal, on the other hand, is a real place, one of the counties making up the Republic of Ireland. Friel has deep personal connections with his place; as a child he spent an extensive amount of time there, summering with his mother's sisters, and he has since settled in Donegal himself.
In addition this personal significance, Donegal also occupies a distinctive place in the Irish national consciousness. The county is shrouded in romantic mystique, and has always lagged behind the rest of Ireland in terms of economic and social development. However, because of this economic backwardness, many of the customs, beliefs, and cultural practices of traditional Irish life have been preserved in Donegal. And it is in Donegal where the ancient festival of La Lughnasa is perhaps most vividly celebrated. The title of the play refers to the celebratory dancing associated with this pagan festival. The setting is thus a kind of mythical location, a small sanctuary of authentic Irish life that modernity has yet to reach. Or is it? As the narrator, states in the opening monologue, his memories of Ballybeg in the summer of ‘36 are full of "a sense of . . . things changing too quickly before my eyes." He recalls a "widening breach between what seemed to be and what was, of things . . . becoming what they ought not to be." It is the experience of change played out against the deeply traditional Donegal setting that provides much of the play's discord and pity.
Dancing at Lughnasa - Identity Quotations
Friday, 20 April 2012
When the Body is the Last Resource for Protest... Wider Reading (Poetry) 17: The Rhythm of Time
Bobby Sands was an Irish volunteer of the Provisional Irish Republican Army and member of the British Parliament. He was twenty seven years old when he died on the sixty sixth day of hunger-strike in the H-Block prison hospital, Long Kesh, on the 5th May 1981.
The young IRA Volunteer had spent the last nine years of his fleeting life in jail as a result of his Irish republican activities, but became, by the time of his death, world-famous and a household name for his election to the British parliament and withstanding of political pressure from all sides to abandon his fast of over two months. His aim was to counter a criminalisation policy by the British government. His sacrifice (as did that of those who followed him) overturned British propaganda within Ireland and had a profound effect in advancing the cause of Irish freedom.
In ‘The Rhythm of Time’ Sands stresses that the spirit of freedom and reflex to fight against injustice has been inherent to man from our very beginning, and here he draws upon their surfacing against the evils throughout history. The persecuted early Christians, American Indians, peasants, slaves, and Irish republican freedom fighters share the stage of history against tyranny. The fractured stanzas may reflect how broken he has realised society is, and the relentless, driving rhythm and rhymes doubtless show the monotony of his incarceration.
The driving force against oppression, as Sands concludes, is the moral superiority of the oppressed. In tracing this spirit across the ages Sands demonstrates an exceptional grasp of history and memory recall, especially considering that he had been denied books, newspapers, radio or TV, and mental stimulation for the last four years of his life. Wat the Tyler, for example, was an English peasant who, in 1381, challenged and led an uprising against the English monarchy. His poetry also gave hope to many of his fellow inmates, as this was their only entertainment, and, in doing so, Sands let them know that their cause was right, and they would someday triumph.
The Rhythm of Time - Identity Quotations
The young IRA Volunteer had spent the last nine years of his fleeting life in jail as a result of his Irish republican activities, but became, by the time of his death, world-famous and a household name for his election to the British parliament and withstanding of political pressure from all sides to abandon his fast of over two months. His aim was to counter a criminalisation policy by the British government. His sacrifice (as did that of those who followed him) overturned British propaganda within Ireland and had a profound effect in advancing the cause of Irish freedom.
In ‘The Rhythm of Time’ Sands stresses that the spirit of freedom and reflex to fight against injustice has been inherent to man from our very beginning, and here he draws upon their surfacing against the evils throughout history. The persecuted early Christians, American Indians, peasants, slaves, and Irish republican freedom fighters share the stage of history against tyranny. The fractured stanzas may reflect how broken he has realised society is, and the relentless, driving rhythm and rhymes doubtless show the monotony of his incarceration.
The driving force against oppression, as Sands concludes, is the moral superiority of the oppressed. In tracing this spirit across the ages Sands demonstrates an exceptional grasp of history and memory recall, especially considering that he had been denied books, newspapers, radio or TV, and mental stimulation for the last four years of his life. Wat the Tyler, for example, was an English peasant who, in 1381, challenged and led an uprising against the English monarchy. His poetry also gave hope to many of his fellow inmates, as this was their only entertainment, and, in doing so, Sands let them know that their cause was right, and they would someday triumph.
The Rhythm of Time - Identity Quotations
Thursday, 19 April 2012
Whodunnit? Wider Reading 16: The Lovely Bones
"My name was Salmon, like the fish; first name, Susie. I was fourteen when I was murdered on December 6th, 1973. My murderer was a man from our neighbourhood. My mother liked his border flowers, and my father talked to him once about fertilizer.” This is Susie Salmon, who watches from heaven as her family and loved ones try to come to terms with her death, unsolved ever since she was raped and dismembered by a neighbour in the cornfield opposite her house, who left no evidence behind, save an elbow and copious amounts of blood. The writer Alice Sebold is herself a rape survivor; however another girl also fell victim to an attack in the same tunnel, but was not so fortunate as to survive. Many critics speculate that the novel was Sebold’s attempt to voice that girl’s story, not least since her own was told in her first unpublished memoir, "Lucky."
Many instances of a struggle for identity occur within this novel, the most prevalent of which is the individual (and rather selfish) struggle experienced by Susie’s mother, Abigail Salmon. Every character within the novel is forced to use a different way of recovering from Susie’s death. Susie, as our narrator, observes them as they struggle through the painful experience of losing a daughter/sister, and the profound affect it has had on each person. Her sister Lindsey wants to live away from Susie’s shadow. Her young brother Buckley wants to be let in on the secret of her death, and, when he is, allows himself to miss her and to honour her. Her father Jack wants to avenge his daughter’s death by finding her killer. Abigail, on the other hand, does not want to face Susie’s death and instead hides from her family, withdrawing into herself and eventually running away. It seems that Abigail never wanted to have a family in the first place, and she is punished for it by losing Susie physically, and Lindsey and Buckley psychologically, through her neglect.
The religious element of this novel is entirely questionable, as some readers may argue that the heaven Susie is transported to after her death is of a Christian nature, while others argue that, as neither God nor Jesus is involved, it cannot be. Susie’s soul accidentally “touches” classmate Ruth Connors as it leaves earth, and for the f=rest of her life Ruth finds herself constantly exploring the idea of spirits and death.
Some characters in the novel also experience a struggle for sexual identity. Ruth Connors is more intensely affected by the dead than others, especially Susie, and finds herself struggling to make friends and relate to other people. She is also a lesbian, but in the 1970s this would have been considered unacceptable, and is unable to act on it or even tell anyone. Susie herself manages, by some complicated soul-exchanging mechanism, to make love to her almost-boyfriend Ray Singh through Ruth’s body, and Ray finds himself torn between his friendship with Ruth and his lingering love for Susie. Both Ray and Susie find solace in The Act; afterwards, Ray feels able to cherish his memory of Susie whilst moving on, while Susie moves on entirely, to a larger Heaven.
A small element of a national identity struggle can be found in "The Lovely Bones" as well. During the initial search for Susie’s murderer, Ray Singh is an immediate suspect due to his unusual Indian heritage. Despite the police eventually realising that he is innocent, the immediate accusal has a great effect on Ray and his family.
The Lovely Bones - Identity Quotations
Many instances of a struggle for identity occur within this novel, the most prevalent of which is the individual (and rather selfish) struggle experienced by Susie’s mother, Abigail Salmon. Every character within the novel is forced to use a different way of recovering from Susie’s death. Susie, as our narrator, observes them as they struggle through the painful experience of losing a daughter/sister, and the profound affect it has had on each person. Her sister Lindsey wants to live away from Susie’s shadow. Her young brother Buckley wants to be let in on the secret of her death, and, when he is, allows himself to miss her and to honour her. Her father Jack wants to avenge his daughter’s death by finding her killer. Abigail, on the other hand, does not want to face Susie’s death and instead hides from her family, withdrawing into herself and eventually running away. It seems that Abigail never wanted to have a family in the first place, and she is punished for it by losing Susie physically, and Lindsey and Buckley psychologically, through her neglect.
The religious element of this novel is entirely questionable, as some readers may argue that the heaven Susie is transported to after her death is of a Christian nature, while others argue that, as neither God nor Jesus is involved, it cannot be. Susie’s soul accidentally “touches” classmate Ruth Connors as it leaves earth, and for the f=rest of her life Ruth finds herself constantly exploring the idea of spirits and death.
Some characters in the novel also experience a struggle for sexual identity. Ruth Connors is more intensely affected by the dead than others, especially Susie, and finds herself struggling to make friends and relate to other people. She is also a lesbian, but in the 1970s this would have been considered unacceptable, and is unable to act on it or even tell anyone. Susie herself manages, by some complicated soul-exchanging mechanism, to make love to her almost-boyfriend Ray Singh through Ruth’s body, and Ray finds himself torn between his friendship with Ruth and his lingering love for Susie. Both Ray and Susie find solace in The Act; afterwards, Ray feels able to cherish his memory of Susie whilst moving on, while Susie moves on entirely, to a larger Heaven.
A small element of a national identity struggle can be found in "The Lovely Bones" as well. During the initial search for Susie’s murderer, Ray Singh is an immediate suspect due to his unusual Indian heritage. Despite the police eventually realising that he is innocent, the immediate accusal has a great effect on Ray and his family.
The Lovely Bones - Identity Quotations
Friday, 13 April 2012
Destroying Evil or Mindless Slaughter? Wider Reading (Drama) 15: The Crucible
Arthur Miller’s classic parable of mass hysteria draws a chilling parallel between the Salem witch-hunt of 1692 and the McCarthyism which gripped America in the 1950s – two of the strangest and most awful chapters in human history. The story of how the small community of Salem is stirred into madness by superstition, paranoia and malice, culminating in a violent climax, is a savage attack on the evils of persecution and the terrifying power of false accusations.
The religious (and racial) identity of each character is at stake as the events of the play unfold, and their ultimate demise or salvage depends almost entirely on their reputation. Tituba, as a black slave, has the lowest social standing of all the characters and is quick to be accused. However, she acquires immense power over her superiors as she accuses others of witchcraft. Contrastingly, characters with impeccable reputations such as Elizabeth Proctor or Rebecca Nurse find their names dragged through the mud in their situations.
The age-old question of guilty or not guilty is explored with tact and accuracy within this play. The extreme strictness prevalent within Salem causes guilt to be bottled up within the citizens, acting as a catalyst to the mass rush for confession and punishment. The playwright himself ascertains that the Salem witch-hunt was an opportunity for the stifled members of the community to both declare their own sins and publicly identify those of others. This is what motivates not only the witch hunts themselves, but also the actions of most of the focal characters. Abigail is constantly reprimanded by her reputation-destroying fun in the woods, while penitence over his infidelity plagues her secret lover Proctor. Meanwhile, Reverend Hale must attempt to undermine the court that he helped create as atonement for his own sins, but is now spinning out of control. This is the ultimate and tragic irony of the Salem witch-hunts: not only that the sins of the trials themselves uncontrollably overtook the sins of the original crime, but that there was rarely an original crime to begin with.
The Crucible - Identity Quotations
The religious (and racial) identity of each character is at stake as the events of the play unfold, and their ultimate demise or salvage depends almost entirely on their reputation. Tituba, as a black slave, has the lowest social standing of all the characters and is quick to be accused. However, she acquires immense power over her superiors as she accuses others of witchcraft. Contrastingly, characters with impeccable reputations such as Elizabeth Proctor or Rebecca Nurse find their names dragged through the mud in their situations.
The age-old question of guilty or not guilty is explored with tact and accuracy within this play. The extreme strictness prevalent within Salem causes guilt to be bottled up within the citizens, acting as a catalyst to the mass rush for confession and punishment. The playwright himself ascertains that the Salem witch-hunt was an opportunity for the stifled members of the community to both declare their own sins and publicly identify those of others. This is what motivates not only the witch hunts themselves, but also the actions of most of the focal characters. Abigail is constantly reprimanded by her reputation-destroying fun in the woods, while penitence over his infidelity plagues her secret lover Proctor. Meanwhile, Reverend Hale must attempt to undermine the court that he helped create as atonement for his own sins, but is now spinning out of control. This is the ultimate and tragic irony of the Salem witch-hunts: not only that the sins of the trials themselves uncontrollably overtook the sins of the original crime, but that there was rarely an original crime to begin with.
The Crucible - Identity Quotations
Monday, 9 April 2012
Got an Identity Crisis? Wider Reading (Poetry) 14: Knowing Me
In his poem, Benjamin Zephaniah constantly emphasises how proud he is to simply be who he is, whether it be British, black, dyslexic, or a poet. He does not "feel lost," neither is he against relations with other ethnicities, as "diversity is [his] pornography" and he does not need to have an "identity crisis to feel oppressed". Unlike other poems on slavery, oppression and imprisonment, Zephaniah takes a more modern approach and combines the society which he lives in to his own personal views on identity matters. He does not allow what happened to his ancestors to affect his identity and feels accepted in the world he lives in now.
The constant repetition of “I don’t have an identity crisis” is used almost as a refrain, and relentlessly reinforces its message. The language used is a mixture of Standard English and Afro-Caribbean English, complete with words such as “dis” and “kool.” Zephaniah lampoons the type of language used by those such as the “Workshop Facilitator” in favour of humorous word-play. From his language at least, it seems that the writer is clear about his identity and, contrary to expectations, transcends what he, as a black Englishman, is expected to feel.
The poem may be light in tone, but underlying it is exasperation, particularly in the final stanza, when the poet proclaims that he is “sick of people asking me if I feel British or West Indian,” as if every capitalized identity has become merely a stereotype.
Knowing Me - Identity Quotations
The constant repetition of “I don’t have an identity crisis” is used almost as a refrain, and relentlessly reinforces its message. The language used is a mixture of Standard English and Afro-Caribbean English, complete with words such as “dis” and “kool.” Zephaniah lampoons the type of language used by those such as the “Workshop Facilitator” in favour of humorous word-play. From his language at least, it seems that the writer is clear about his identity and, contrary to expectations, transcends what he, as a black Englishman, is expected to feel.
The poem may be light in tone, but underlying it is exasperation, particularly in the final stanza, when the poet proclaims that he is “sick of people asking me if I feel British or West Indian,” as if every capitalized identity has become merely a stereotype.
Knowing Me - Identity Quotations
Sunday, 8 April 2012
Paradise Lost? Wider Reading 13: East of Eden
Over forty years after his death, Nobel Prize-winner John Steinbeck still remains one of the greatest American writers of all time. His extraordinary talent is showcased here, in an epic tale spanning decades between the American Civil War and the end of World War One. Steinbeck himself considered it to be his "magnum opus," and later stated that "I think everything else I have written has been, in a sense, practice for this." The novel follows the interwoven lives of two families living in the Salinas Valley, California, the Trasks and the Hamiltons. Steinbeck ties many themes within the novel together with direct references and parallels to the poisonous relationship of Cain and Abel and the fall of Adam and Eve, within the Book of Genesis.
The primary theme explored within the novel is the ageless struggle between good and evil. Samuel Hamilton is considered to be the embodiment of goodness, while Cathy Ames, his polar opposite, represents pure evil. Both of these characters have an equal effect on the protagonist Adam Trask, who struggles between love for Cathy as his wife, and his admiration and respect for his mentor, Samuel.
While the theme of "love for the land" may be more prominent within Gone with the Wind, Steinbeck's vividly-described California hills also play a part in the novel, revealing the nature of the two families which reside there. The Trasks are wealthy and live on the most fertile soil, but neglect to cultivate it after their lives have been poisoned by Cathy. In contrast, the Hamiltons settle on a barren patch, but raise nine successful children. Land also continues the theme of good versus evil. The Eden-like Salinas valley is sandwiched between the "good" Gabilan Mountains, which lie to the east and are drenched in sunlight, and the "bad" Santa Lucias Mountains, which are foreboding and shadowed.
The concept of "original sin" is also present within this novel. The "sin" is performed by Cyrus Trask, Adam's father, who lied during the American civil War to attain a high status in office, thus leaving his sons an ill-gotten fortune. Both Adam and his brother Charles seem doomed to a life of misery in penance for this sin, which trickles down through the generations. Cal also makes a small fortune from less-fortunate farmers during the Great War. However, his brother's death enables Cal to choose good over evil, so to speak, and undo the family curse and live a morally upright life.
East of Eden - Identity Quotations
The primary theme explored within the novel is the ageless struggle between good and evil. Samuel Hamilton is considered to be the embodiment of goodness, while Cathy Ames, his polar opposite, represents pure evil. Both of these characters have an equal effect on the protagonist Adam Trask, who struggles between love for Cathy as his wife, and his admiration and respect for his mentor, Samuel.
While the theme of "love for the land" may be more prominent within Gone with the Wind, Steinbeck's vividly-described California hills also play a part in the novel, revealing the nature of the two families which reside there. The Trasks are wealthy and live on the most fertile soil, but neglect to cultivate it after their lives have been poisoned by Cathy. In contrast, the Hamiltons settle on a barren patch, but raise nine successful children. Land also continues the theme of good versus evil. The Eden-like Salinas valley is sandwiched between the "good" Gabilan Mountains, which lie to the east and are drenched in sunlight, and the "bad" Santa Lucias Mountains, which are foreboding and shadowed.
The concept of "original sin" is also present within this novel. The "sin" is performed by Cyrus Trask, Adam's father, who lied during the American civil War to attain a high status in office, thus leaving his sons an ill-gotten fortune. Both Adam and his brother Charles seem doomed to a life of misery in penance for this sin, which trickles down through the generations. Cal also makes a small fortune from less-fortunate farmers during the Great War. However, his brother's death enables Cal to choose good over evil, so to speak, and undo the family curse and live a morally upright life.
East of Eden - Identity Quotations
Sunday, 1 April 2012
One Man Against the World? Wider Reading (Drama) 12: Death of a Salesman
In the spring of 1948 Arthur Miller retreated to a log cabin in Connecticut with the first two lines of a new play already fixed in his mind. He emerged six weeks later with the final script of Death of a Salesman - a painful examination of American life and consumerism. In creating Willy Loman, his destructively insecure anti-hero, Miller himself defined his aim as being "to set forth what happens when a man does not have a grip on the forces of life."
As a playwright, Miller portrays many common themes in his plays. The themes of ordinary people experiencing extraordinary tragedy, the vast, unattainable American Dream and the tragedy of simply being human, in particular are explored within Death of a Salesman, causing it to be frequently dubbed "the first Great American Tragedy."
The structure of this play also plays a large part in showing Willy's struggle for identity and ultimate deterioration. Miller does this through the use of both past and present and careful weaving of the text, thus showing, rather than telling, the audience about Willy's downward spiral into madness. The question of what is illusion and what is reality is also frequently raised. The episodic structure, as well as the themes and focus on a single character, draw many comparisons to Tennessee Williams' play "A Streetcar Named Desire."
Death of a Salesman - Identity Quotations
As a playwright, Miller portrays many common themes in his plays. The themes of ordinary people experiencing extraordinary tragedy, the vast, unattainable American Dream and the tragedy of simply being human, in particular are explored within Death of a Salesman, causing it to be frequently dubbed "the first Great American Tragedy."
The structure of this play also plays a large part in showing Willy's struggle for identity and ultimate deterioration. Miller does this through the use of both past and present and careful weaving of the text, thus showing, rather than telling, the audience about Willy's downward spiral into madness. The question of what is illusion and what is reality is also frequently raised. The episodic structure, as well as the themes and focus on a single character, draw many comparisons to Tennessee Williams' play "A Streetcar Named Desire."
Death of a Salesman - Identity Quotations
Saturday, 31 March 2012
Knitting Tigers or Hidden Message? Wider Reading (Poetry) 11: Aunt Jennifer's Tigers
"Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" is a poem by Adrienne Rich. Rich was an American poet and feminist, and is widely considered to be one of the most influential and widely read poets of the 20th Century. She was commended by the famous poet W.H. Auden, and is frequently credited with bringing the oppression of women and lesbians to the forefront of the poetic community. Rich also acknowledged that lesbianism was, for her, as much a political issue as a personal one.
This poem is a prime example of Rich's talent and strong feelings about treatment of women. She uses strong imagery such as "bright topaz denizens of a world of green" to initially convey the image of a woman embroidering a fancy tapestry. However, underneath the initial aesthetic facade lie two stanzas depicting a scared and oppressed woman, frantically embroidering under the domineering weight of her husband. This atmosphere of male oppression in conveyed through adjectives such as "massive," "terrified," and "heavily."
It seems that Aunt Jennifer is unable to form an identity for herself, so it attempting to create one through her tapestry, in which she embroiders images of strong, colourful, powerful cats, which she undoubtedly wishes she could be. And it seems that she has succeeded, as, in the last stanza of this poem which weaves words as one weaves thread, Rich tells us that her tigers will survive, even after the terrified woman who created them has gone.
Aunt Jennifer's Tigers - Identity Quotations
This poem is a prime example of Rich's talent and strong feelings about treatment of women. She uses strong imagery such as "bright topaz denizens of a world of green" to initially convey the image of a woman embroidering a fancy tapestry. However, underneath the initial aesthetic facade lie two stanzas depicting a scared and oppressed woman, frantically embroidering under the domineering weight of her husband. This atmosphere of male oppression in conveyed through adjectives such as "massive," "terrified," and "heavily."
It seems that Aunt Jennifer is unable to form an identity for herself, so it attempting to create one through her tapestry, in which she embroiders images of strong, colourful, powerful cats, which she undoubtedly wishes she could be. And it seems that she has succeeded, as, in the last stanza of this poem which weaves words as one weaves thread, Rich tells us that her tigers will survive, even after the terrified woman who created them has gone.
Aunt Jennifer's Tigers - Identity Quotations
Wednesday, 21 March 2012
A Sharp Chain in the Mouth... Wider Reading (Drama) 10: Equus
When a deranged boy, Alan Strang, blinds six horses with a metal spike he is sentenced to psychiatric treatment. Dr Dysart is the man given the task of uncovering what happened the night Strang committed his crime, but in doing so will open up his own wounds. For Dysart struggles to define sanity, and justify his marriage, his career, and his life of normality; ultimately he must ask himself: is it patient of psychiatrist whose life is being laid bare? The most shocking play of its day, Equus uses an act of violence to explore faith, insanity, and how the materialism of modern life can destroy humanity's capacity for pain and passion.
In his play, Peter Shaffer explores many themes which can be related to the struggle for identity. The foremost of these is the struggle for religious identity experienced by Alan Strang. Alan and his family's relations are primarily influenced and disturbed by their very different points of view concerning religion and divinity. His mother is very religious, and effectively forces Alan to accept it by reading the Bible to him every night. In contrast, his father shuns religion. Alan himself subscribes to neither of these beliefs; his own occupy him far more. Indeed, many of his actions, including those concerning horses, resemble rites of passage.
While Alan's obsession with horses and "Equus" borders on the fanatically religious, a sexual element is also present. It seems that his worship of the equine is an attempt to placate his own muddled feelings, such as his inability to perform sexually with his girlfriend. This failed encounter in the stable is primarily what leads to his attack on the horses, blinding them as he believes they condemn him for his sexual activity. Sexuality in this play represents passion, and it is this passion for life which Alan gains in his worship, which differentiates him so greatly from his psychiatrist Dysart, who is ensnared by society. Dysart realizes the barenness of his life, but it is only when faced with Alan as a passionate worshipper that he understands what he does not possess.
Equus - Identity Quotations
In his play, Peter Shaffer explores many themes which can be related to the struggle for identity. The foremost of these is the struggle for religious identity experienced by Alan Strang. Alan and his family's relations are primarily influenced and disturbed by their very different points of view concerning religion and divinity. His mother is very religious, and effectively forces Alan to accept it by reading the Bible to him every night. In contrast, his father shuns religion. Alan himself subscribes to neither of these beliefs; his own occupy him far more. Indeed, many of his actions, including those concerning horses, resemble rites of passage.
While Alan's obsession with horses and "Equus" borders on the fanatically religious, a sexual element is also present. It seems that his worship of the equine is an attempt to placate his own muddled feelings, such as his inability to perform sexually with his girlfriend. This failed encounter in the stable is primarily what leads to his attack on the horses, blinding them as he believes they condemn him for his sexual activity. Sexuality in this play represents passion, and it is this passion for life which Alan gains in his worship, which differentiates him so greatly from his psychiatrist Dysart, who is ensnared by society. Dysart realizes the barenness of his life, but it is only when faced with Alan as a passionate worshipper that he understands what he does not possess.
Equus - Identity Quotations
Sunday, 18 March 2012
No Place for Us My Dear... Wider Reading (Poetry) 9: Refugee Blues
In his poem, W.H.Auden transcribes the heartrending lament of two refugees who have fled their country in the face of Hitler and his growing influence. The couple are now ostracized within an unfamiliar community.
Throughout his poem, Auden weaves an increasing sense of not belonging, with the feeling of isolation magnified by imagery such as "I saw a door opened and a cat let in," along with short, disconnected stanzas.
Prevalent too is the more direct poke at the poor treatment inflicted on immigrants, both today, then, and throughout history. Our narrator is isolated within the community and fears for their own safety.
It seems that, in fleeing one kind of torment, namely a corrupt nation, they have discovered another in the form of an intolerant society.
Refugee Blues - Identity Quotations
Throughout his poem, Auden weaves an increasing sense of not belonging, with the feeling of isolation magnified by imagery such as "I saw a door opened and a cat let in," along with short, disconnected stanzas.
Prevalent too is the more direct poke at the poor treatment inflicted on immigrants, both today, then, and throughout history. Our narrator is isolated within the community and fears for their own safety.
It seems that, in fleeing one kind of torment, namely a corrupt nation, they have discovered another in the form of an intolerant society.
Refugee Blues - Identity Quotations
Friday, 16 March 2012
Thoughtful Mr Fox. Wider Reading (Poetry) 8: The Thought-Fox
Ted Hughes was an English poet, born in 1930. He was the Poet Laureate from 1984 until his death in 1998, and was married to the American poet Sylvia Plath until her famous oven-suicide. Many people, including numerous feminists, claim he was responsible for her death, though Hughes himself refused to take any part in the debate.
"The Thought-Fox" is the developed offspring of Hughes' earlier work, much of which is rooted in nature and concerns the innocent savagery of animals. The poem is essentially a poem about writing a poem. The fox appears in the clearing like an idea entering the head, and its footprints left in the snow appear as writing on the page. At first it is blurred and undefined, like an idea, and the writer's task is to coax it out and develop it. The imagery of this poem causes the reader to picture the fox actually jumping through the eyes of the poet. This means that the fox enters the cavern of the mind as it would enter its own lair, bringing with it the hot animal smell of its body and all the excitement and triumph of the achieved vision.
The primary identity struggle here is the individual struggle of the writer, as his identity seems to be second to poetic inspiration, which fills the head as effectively as snow fills a clearing. The "fox" described within appears to have its own intuitive, sensual identity which the writer himself cannot possess.
The Thought-Fox Identity Quotations
"The Thought-Fox" is the developed offspring of Hughes' earlier work, much of which is rooted in nature and concerns the innocent savagery of animals. The poem is essentially a poem about writing a poem. The fox appears in the clearing like an idea entering the head, and its footprints left in the snow appear as writing on the page. At first it is blurred and undefined, like an idea, and the writer's task is to coax it out and develop it. The imagery of this poem causes the reader to picture the fox actually jumping through the eyes of the poet. This means that the fox enters the cavern of the mind as it would enter its own lair, bringing with it the hot animal smell of its body and all the excitement and triumph of the achieved vision.
The primary identity struggle here is the individual struggle of the writer, as his identity seems to be second to poetic inspiration, which fills the head as effectively as snow fills a clearing. The "fox" described within appears to have its own intuitive, sensual identity which the writer himself cannot possess.
The Thought-Fox Identity Quotations
Friday, 20 January 2012
Italians, Germans, and a Mandolin! Wider Reading 7: Captain Corelli's Mandolin
Captain Corelli's Mandolin is a 1994 novel by Louis de Bernieres. It is set in the middle of World War Two, during the Italian occupation of the Greek island of Cephallonia. The book narrates the story of Pelagia, a young woman living on the island. She is engaged to a young man named Mandras, but she is in love with Captain Antonio Corelli, an Italian officer posted to Cephallonia as part of the occupying forces.
Many themes of an identity struggle can be identified here. One of which is the struggle for identity of Carlo, one of Corelli's soldiers. As a homosexual, he is forced to hide his true nature to escape "shame and scorn." He pours out his lament into several chapters of his "last will and testament," titled "L'Omosessuale." Pelagia also experiences a struggle for gender identity, for although she is a talented doctor she is unable to practice it professionally because she is a woman.
Captain Corelli's struggle is of a national nature, being one of few Italians on a Greek island. Not forgetting, of course, the struggle for national identity of the whole island, being first occupied by Italy and then Germany, both of which will have left their mark both culturally and physically.
Captain Corelli's Mandolin - Identity Quotations
Many themes of an identity struggle can be identified here. One of which is the struggle for identity of Carlo, one of Corelli's soldiers. As a homosexual, he is forced to hide his true nature to escape "shame and scorn." He pours out his lament into several chapters of his "last will and testament," titled "L'Omosessuale." Pelagia also experiences a struggle for gender identity, for although she is a talented doctor she is unable to practice it professionally because she is a woman.
Captain Corelli's struggle is of a national nature, being one of few Italians on a Greek island. Not forgetting, of course, the struggle for national identity of the whole island, being first occupied by Italy and then Germany, both of which will have left their mark both culturally and physically.
Captain Corelli's Mandolin - Identity Quotations
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