drama ii modern drama
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DRAMA IIMODERN DRAMA
Lecture 12
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SYNOPSISO’Casey ‘s Works are a representation of contemporary
influences: Nothingness, Hollowness and Purposelessness
Irish Civil War: Jingoism How it effects the society and the individuals, How it crushes the economy and the system, How it disintegrates the family structure, how it demolishes the psychology of the people and
how it creates generation gap
How this influence results in Nothingness, Hollowness and Purposelessness
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Sean O’Casey was born in 1818 and died in 1964. The play has been written on the background of Irish Civil War, which has been going for centuries.
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Irish Civil War
Juno and the Paycock: Jingois
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Jingoism
flag waving“an appeal intended to arouse patriotic emotions”
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Jingoism (Denotation)
1 2Extreme
nationalism characterized especially by a
belligerent foreign policy; chauvinistic patriotism.
extreme or eccentric national
loyalty that is hostile to the interests of any other
nation.
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Jingoism is extreme patriotism in the form of aggressive foreign policy. In practice, it is a country's advocacy of the use of threats or actual force against other countries in order to safeguard what it perceives as its national interests. Colloquially, it refers to excessive bias in judging one's own country as superior to others—an extreme type of nationalism.
The term originated in Britain, expressing a pugnacious attitude toward Russia in the 1870s, and appeared in the American press by 1893
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There are many faction involved in the play
(i) There are the free
staters
(ii) There are also those
who demand have ruled Ireland within
the authority of English parliament
(iii) There are the
unionists, who want unity with min Ireland
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WWI – Irish War Main Ireland got independence after the First World
War Ireland is divided into Southern and Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland is now called Ulster. The people of
main Ireland are Roman Catholic. The majority of Ulster is Anglican. So there is political and religious problem.
(i)Either to unite with main IrelandOR(ii)To unite with EnglandOR(iii)To be total independent was the main problem or enigma.
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“Juno and the Paycock” War at its background (like O’Casey’s other plays)
O’Casey is very much against the war fought under any pretext. He closely observed
how war affects the society and the individuals,
how war crushes the economy and the system,
how war disintegrates the family structure,
how it demolishes the psychology of the people and how it creates generation gap.
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O’Casy’s PositionThus O’Casey condemns…
•the exploitation of man-by-man,
Social Unjust
•man’s inhuman treatment towards man,
inequality
•man’s barbarity against man
violence
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence
The play begins with Mary’s reading a newspaper. The very first information we get form the play is of a gruesome murder.
“On a little bye-road, out beyant Finglas, he was found.”
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence
O’Casey evidently has sympathies for the poverty stricken and war ridden Irish society. There is nothing predicable in Ireland. Everyone is in extreme danger. They are hanging between life and death.
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence Brutality: Foreign to Irishmen
There are lots of references in the play regarding Ireland‘s religious and political history.
Irish makes many attempts to shake off the foreign yoke. Foreigners are very inhuman to them. In 1916, hundred of casualties and the execution of the leaders are faultless examples of that.
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence Inhumanity: Irishman to Irishman
But this inhumanity is not just caused by foreigners. The real problem arises with the killing of Irishman by Irishman.
War, or to be more exact, a civil war has no solution to man’s problem; rather it aggravates the miseries of victims. The civil war is not confined to two fractions rather it expands to the whole Ireland. The death of Robbie Tancred and Johnny Boyle are perfect examples of that.
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence Johnny, who has lost an arm and has a hip
shattered in a fight, is at the end dragged away and shot by his former republican commanders because he betrayed comrade Tancred.
All this shows that Ireland is preying on herself. Earlier Johnny had undoubtedly behaved heroically but the hellish civil war compelled him to betray his comrade.
This means the stupid civil war is turning into traitors because of its nothingness and hollowness purposelessness.
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence Mirrorism: Inhumanity vs. Humanity Juno emerges as a great humanist and realist. She is a true pacifist and is against man’s inhumanity
against man. She has an acute observation and knows about the truth
of things. She is very realist and anti-idealist. When Mary
emphasizes that one ought to stand by one’s principle being “a principle’s a principle” and tries to justify her call of strike, Juno very realistically remarks:
and “When the employers sacrifice wan victim, the Trades
Unions go wan betther be sacrificin’ a hundred.”
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence
Being a realist, she has a firm belief in the idea that the fault does not lie with the stars but with the people themselves. She says:
“Ah, what can God do agen the’ stupidity o’ men!”
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence The domestic tragedy, which mainly springs out form
pregnancy, is due to the inhumanity of the male. That male chauvinist society cannot tolerate a mistake
by a young girl. Whereas on the other hand the idiots like captain Boyle and Joxer Daly are left unaccountable.
Hope for a good time is only due to the courage of women. They are very humane and cooperative.
O’Casy’s criticism of life is conveyed through the repetition of significance of deep dialogues. The words of Mrs. Tancred lamentation are pungently recorded by Juno, when she too, is mourning over a slain son.
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence “Sacred Heart of the Crucified Jesus, take
away our hearts o’ stone……..an’ give ushearts o’ flesh! ……..Take away this murdherin’ hate … an’ give us Thine own eternal love!”
Against the vanity and moral bankruptcy of masculine character, O’Casey elevates the mother figure when Juno plans to work for Mary and her unborn child. Juno suffers the pain of existence but she sustains life.
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence Appearances vs. Reality
The opportunist class represented by Nugent has also been condemned.
According to O’Casey this opportunist class is more harmful than even the combatants.
They themselves become the cause of civil war and play a double role.
Nugent wants other to respect “Irish people national regard for the dead” but stitches suits for the civil guards at night.
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Social Unjust, Inequality Violence Thus, we see O’Casey very beautifully
depicts man’s inhumanity towards women man’s inhumanity towards man
O’Casey is at heart a humanist and a pacifist. He considers life mere inevitable and all idealism is subservient to it. He condemns all principles and gives one and the only principle to live all the days of life peacefully.
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Principles vs. Materialism
"Principle" and Reality, or O'Casy's Materialism
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Principles vs. Materialism
As O'Casey linguistically presents a version of materialism in Irish political strife, does he thematically treat the conflict between theory and reality in the play?
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Principles vs. Materialism
Within Juno and the Paycock itself, there are two opposing views of the relationship between theory or "principle" and material reality.
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Principles vs. Materialism On one hand, the betrayal of
principles has tragic consequences: Johnny is killed for his betrayal of his
comrade Tancred; Mary is pregnant out of wedlock; Boyle is
left again impoverished; and the family is humiliated. On the other hand, principles have
left Johnny armless and Mary unemployed.
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Principles vs. Materialism References…
Mary, defending her labor strike to her mother says, "a principle's a principle;" in contrast,
Joxer, Captain Boyle's drinking companion, contends, "It's betther to be a coward than a corpse!", and
Mrs. Boyle tells her son "Ah, you lost your best principle, me boy, when you lost your arm; them's the only sort o' principles that's any good to a workin' man."
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Principles vs. Materialism Ronald Ayling argues that the play is
centrally concerned with betrayal, as Bentham betrays Mary; Johnny betrays Tancred; and Boyle's indifference amounts to a
"betrayal of life.“ Mary also is a traitor: she abandons Jerry
her materialist principles to take up with a man without dogma.
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Principles vs. Materialism Nothingness, Purposlessness In her apparent rejection of "principles", Mrs. Boyle is
a truly heroic figure, particularly at the beginning of the play, when she is the only member of the family who is precluded from work on account of principle (Mary and Johnny) or lack thereof (Captain Boyle).
Mrs. Boyle's necessary materialism neither dooms nor saves her but rather leaves her as a suffering survivor with a dead son, the same shiftless husband she had in the beginning, and a pregnant daughter, whom she comforts when Mary laments the fatherlessness of her child, saying,
"It'll have what's far betther-- it'll have two mothers."
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Principles vs. Materialism
The play ends both with the condemnation of "principles" as Mrs. Boyle says "Ah, why didn't I remember that then he wasn't a Diehard or a Stater, but only a poor dead son!", and the depiction of the utter degradation of the indifference that Boyle and Joxer represent.
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Principles vs. Materialism
Given O'Casy's apparent rejection of both abstract "principle" (Irish Independence, labor rights) and its absence, the play puts forth a quotidian heroism in the form of Mrs. Boyle.
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Principles vs. Materialism
Mrs. Boyle is not without principles like her husband; she is anything but indifferent. However, her principle- supporting and protecting her family- is firmly grounded in material reality and is divorced from political and economic theory.
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Principles vs. Materialism Nothingness and Hollowness Purposelessness
Tellingly, Mrs. Madigan shouts at the police: "For you're the same as yous were undher the British Government-- never where yous are wanted! As far as I can see, the Polis as Polis, in this city, is Null an' Void!“ Regardless of the political status of Ireland, the material reality for its citizens remains the same, particularly in the wake of continued interfactional violence.
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Deterioration of a Relationship: Poverty, Religion, Escapism
Juno and the Paycock Deterioration of a Relationship
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“Juno and the Paycock” by Sean O’Casey is set in the background of the Irish Civil War.
Throughout the play, we can see the titular character’s, Juno Boyle and Jack Boyle, relationship deteriorate , and how dramatic events in their lives and the lives of their children, Johnny and Mary, cause the entire family to collapse.
Background and its Relevance 36
The play is set closely following the signing of the treaty dividing Ireland into sections
It features the resulting conflict between the diehards who want a united, free Ireland, and the free-staters, who support the treaty,
The conflict represents the clash of fanatical nationalism and practicality, of idealism and a recognition that what the people truly wanted was peace.
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The play explores some of the relevant ideas of the time, including the poverty, religious attitudes and escapism of the working class in Dublin in the 1920‘s, and
how these characteristics affected the communities that lived within the tenements of Dublin at this time.
Deterioration of a Relationship: Poverty38
In the first act we see a great deal of conflict between Juno and Boyle.
The root of this conflict lies in Boyles inability to accept responsibility for supporting his family, as he refuses to seek work and spends his days drinking with his manipulative, scrounging friend Joxer.
Deterioration of a Relationship: Poverty39
Juno is forced to act as wife, mother and sole source of income for the family,
the prime motivation for this character being to keep her ragged family unit together
“Who has kep th’ home together for the past few years - only me”
Deterioration of a Relationship: Poverty40
This introduces us very early on to the theme of poverty in the play. The tension in the relationship is directly linked to poverty throughout the play,
Boyle’s lack of responsibility causing conflict between him and Juno when their financial situation is bad.
“Your poor wife slavin to keep the bit in your mouth…”
We can see O’Casey present both the positive and negative aspects he perceives in poverty.
Contrasting effect41
We see Boyle contrast the strength and ability that destitution can invoke through the character of Juno
Deterioration of a Relationship: Religion
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o There are also a variety of different religions, and attitudes expressed throughout the play.
o One of O Casey’s chief mottos in the play seems to show the co-existence of strong religious convictions, together with a sincere and humane commitment to one’s fellowman.
Religious Conflict43
Juno’s faith is sincere, authentic, and traditional.
Boyle beliefs are just an equal contrast
Religious Conflict44
Juno believes on Johnny’s death that God can do nothing against the stupidity of men, tBoyle presents God to
be biased and sympathize with human’s helplessnessHe is found apologetic and indulged in self sympathy
Religious Conflict45
Juno believes that her husband should be praying
novenas for a job
Boyle considers such acts useless
Novena is a recitation of prayers and
devotions for a special purpose
during nine consecutive days
Religious Conflict46
Juno believes what Ireland needs is
more piety. Boyles, Johnny and Bentham portray
unfaithfulness /betrayal to be their
services in the time of need
Religious Conflict47
Bentham espouses a religion by the name of
Theosophy. This is projected as vague and abstract and certainly
seems to be compatible with his own shallow
commitment to people.Juno’s religious beliefs
Apparently we find Marry as supporting Juno’s beliefs but her acts Convey it all the opposite- matching
Bentham’s
Deterioration of a Relationship: Idealism and Reality
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The writer dramatizes the conflict between the dream world and the world of reality and shows what happens with relationships when a character is stripped of his/her illusions and forced to face reality.
Deterioration of a Relationship: Idealism and Reality
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• Boyle is presented as a Paycock, who struts throughout the world of the play on a false and imaginary sense of his own self- importance.
Boyle
JunoJuno is portrayed as a character of practicality
and realism
Deterioration of a Relationship: Idealism and Reality
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Denial Within
•His whole life is a lie. His pains, which are invented for the sake of shirking and avoiding work, become real to him.
Parental conflict
•His refuses to face up to the truth and reality about Bentham and the deception surrounding the news of the will.
Parental Conflict
•When reality invades at the conclusion of the play in the form of Mary’s pregnancy and the actual removal of his material possessions, Boyle is unable to cope.
Deterioration of a Relationship: Idealism and Reality
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Mary’s values
•Mary who represents the younger generation also falls victim to illusion. On her first appearance in the play, she is shown to be on strike for a principle.
Confronted in real
•The oppressive and stifling atmosphere generated by the tenement life forces her to seek escape through Bentham.
Results in broken
relations
•For her he represents another way of life and values outside the restricting and debilitating atmosphere within the two-roomed tenement.
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Review Lecture 121. O’Casy ‘s Works are a representation of contemporary
influences: Nothingness, Hollowness and Purposelessness
Irish Civil War: Jingoism How it affects the society and the individuals, How it crushes the economy and the system, How it disintegrates the family structure, how it demolishes the psychology of the people
and how it creates generation gapHow this influence results in Nothingness, Hollowness
and Purposelessness2. Deterioration of a Relationship: Poverty, Religion,
Escapism
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