In this research Paper, we will try to light on the theme of frustration honour and death in the plays of Federico Garcia Lorca who is the most eminent painter, singer of Andalusia Folklore and a poet of gipsy ballads. He was the master of Puppet theatre. His surrealistic style makes him the greatest dramatist among other contemporaries dramatist. It was his great writing for the Spanish Literature that he wrote rural trilogy as Blood wedding, Yerma and The House of Bernarda Alba. Following…
Meanwhile the plays protagonist John Proctor, must face the consequences of his lecherous actions steaming from the fabricated stories of the girls. The hamartia of John Proctor is what ultimately led to his demise. Life was going great for this young fellow as he was considered a great man, an blunt-spoken and honest individual. Unfortunately, one ultimately fatal mistake turned his life around for the worst…
In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, the line between good and evil is blurred as a result of acts of cruelty. Victor Frankenstein played God, and yet, abandoned his creature. His inhumanity shaped his creation and bred their mutual suffering. Their fate is sealed from the very first act of cruelty: as it is the true creator of monsters. Yet, there is no clear-cut victim or perpetrator between the two main characters. Victor and the creature inflicted suffering onto each other in an endless cycle;…
Death of a Salesman is a play about a family. A family who realizes that what they have worked so hard for hasn’t come true. It’s a play about the American dream and it’s a play about the reality that we all face. A reality that working hard doesn’t always mean you will end up where you want to be before you take your final slumber. Arthur Miller’s play Death of a Salesman shows the life of a hardworking man who realizes that his dream is over. Through this realization he brings down his entire…
Comparing the Flaws of Lear and Gloucester Those in positions of high Authority, are seen as strong, powerful, and independent individuals, however, this power can create a negative effect on the holder and lead to several disadvantages. In the play “King Lear” by William Shakespeare, the tragic flaws in the personalities of Lear and Gloucester lead to the loss of their authority as they place their trust in the hands of the wrong people. Shakespeare shows that those with a higher authority…
There were three great writers of tragedy with respect to Greek literature. They are Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides. Sophocles had a firm belief in fate but he also considers free will. He did not stick only to fate like Aeschylus. “Fate is a predetermined course of events. It may be conceived as a predetermined future, whether in general or of an individual. It is a concept based on the belief that there is a fixed natural order to the cosmos.” “Free Will is the freedom of humans to make…
The Odyssey and O Brother where art thou? demonstrates how male roles change with evolving political and social values. The Odyssey utilizes male protagonists to make a commentary traditional values of focalizing a member of the aristocracy position whilst Oh Brother questions the political climate of the Great Depression. Foreground characters used in Homeric poetry are aristocrats, which means the “rule of the best,” which suggests that the Odyssey was created at the end of the Dark Age (c.…
“The Holocaust is not only a tragedy of the Jewish people; it is a failure of humanity as a whole.” Moshe Katsaw. The Holocaust was a global tragedy that occurred in the 1940’s, it affected every corner of the world and killed approximately 11 million people. Of the 11 million, 6 million were Jewish people, and of the 6 million Jewish people 1.5 million were children. One might wonder how in modern history something so horrific could take place. The answer is simply ignorance. When the Holocaust…
claims that Oedipus is too proud to accept the truth in his life backed up by hard evidence. Today a modern word to describe this could be “ignorance,” yet it can also be called “hubris” which is a very old greek word. In Peter Haugen’s article, Hamartia and Hubris in the story of Oedipus, claims that, “Oedipus himself, Laius and Jocasta are equally at fault. These three characters possess a tremendous hubris, that is, they are guilty of an overbearing pride that insists they can sidestep the…
The Painful Journey Into the Wild by John Krakauer and The Catcher in the Rye by D.J. Salinger are stories of opinionated, stubborn young men on introspective journeys provoked by feelings that they are unable to comprehend. The protagonists, Chris McCandless and Holden Caulfield, both travel nearly identical paths, though they have very unique idiosyncrasies. Both Chris McCandless and Holden Caulfield are linked by the unhealable wound archetype, and fueled by oppressed feelings of discontent…