Comedy in Waiting for Godot. Waiting for Godot is a dramatic enactment of the unrecognized absurdity in the world. The drama is absurd in two senses.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
For all people who say I LOVE U when you dont have any clue on what LOVE exactly is…
Advertisements

Godot A Few Things to Consider. Godot and the principle of uncertainty Godot is unlike most pieces of lit. that you discuss in schoolthere is no magical.
What are the main subject areas of interest in this film and what are the main themes and ideas being addressed? Could it be said that there are certain.
God knows        When you are tired and discouraged      from fruitless effort,     GOD knows how hard you have tried.
It Takes More Faith to be an Atheist.
Emerged in the late 40’s and early 50’s Authors have accepted a godless, meaningless universe The individual is essentially isolated and alone. There.
Intro to Existentialism You are free to choose…..
The Theatre of Absurd and
The Theatre of the Absurd and Samuel Beckett ( ) Samuel Beckett.
Absurdism.
1 Peter 1:3-11 A Christian lifestyle that is appropriate to the great spiritual provisions God bestowed on us when we were born again.
Faustus Thesis Statements
History of Philosophy. What is philosophy?  Philosophy is what everyone does when they’re not busy dealing with their everyday business and get a change.
A future worth living for
Chapter 14 Early 20th-Century Drama From An Outline of English Literature by Thornley and Roberts.
HOW CAN SOMETHING BE CONSIDERED A COMEDY WHEN EVERYBODY HAS A DIFFERENT SENSE OF HUMOR? Comedy.
Elements of Drama. Subgenre - Tragedy n A play with an unhappy ending. –People are vulnerable and invincible, as capable of defeat as they are of greatness.
DRAMA II Modern Drama Lecture SYNOPSIS 1. SUMMARY: Waiting for Godot 2. Summary and Analysis Act I: Introduction & Pozzo and Lucky's Entrance Act.
Introduction to the novel The Stranger by Albert Camus
Rev Jack Bryant The Epistle of James Triangle Bible Institute 1.
THE THEATRE OF THE ABSURD
Part One.  Talking about God is meaningless, because you can’t prove that he is even real  God is just a superstition, a myth, wishful thinking.  If.
Poetry Analysis.
Faith Faith vs. Presumption Confidence that actions rooted in good character will yield the best outcome, even when I cannot see how.
MODERNISMMODERNISM. Modernists identified a crisis in their modern world. 1900’s-1960’s.
The simplest definition is poetry is the practice of creating artworks using language. Painters use paint; musicians use sound; poets use language. Here.
When someone asks what genre does this play belong to they mean what style, type or kind of play is it? We’ve learnt about 3 genres so far…..
 Drama is a type of literature usually written to be performed.  The form drama takes is called a play or script.
WAITING FOR GODOT THEME OF CHOICES  Waiting for Godot consists of two men unable to act, move, or think in any significant way while they kill time waiting.
WHO CARES? By Simon Rysin. WHAT IS EXISTENCE?  Who are we? Why are we here? What is our purpose? Are we really real?  These are questions I can guarantee.
The Problem of Knowledge 2 Pages Table of Contents Certainty p – Radical doubt p Radical doubt Relativism p Relativism What should.
Dramatic Genre Mr. Bradley Robbins 6 th Period. Definition of Tragedy Tragedies are serious plays, usually depicting the downfall of the protagonist.
Make Your Dream A Reality. What is life without a dream to go after or without something to strive for? Life is not about just passing your time here.
James 1:1-8.
A Pure Heart An Holy Sinless Life. 1 John 3:1-10 See how much the Father has loved us! His love is so great that we are called God’s children – and so,
Waiting For Godot Samuel Beckett Born in Dublin, Ireland to a Protestant home Remarks of himself “I had little talent for happiness” Was stabbed.
Some brief definitions and examples
Macbeth.
Instilling Hope I. There are significant reasons why the Christian can have hope in any situation. A. Because of whom God is. 1. God is love (Jer. 31:3;
WAITING FOR GODOT.
Irony 3 kinds - Situational - Verbal - Dramatic Irony trumps all! If a dark stormy night is treated ironically all bets are off. The writer is intentionally.
Modernism refers to the bold new experimental styles and forms that swept the arts during the first part of the twentieth century.  Modernism reflects.
Job Job 22 Eliphaz Job 22:21 Good comes from submit to God Sometimes that means discipline But not in Job's case He has been disciplined enough!
Theater of the Absurd and Existential Drama
Doing Metaphysics: Questions, Claims, and Proofs.
He says, “This is the message we have heard from him,” that is, the Lord Jesus, “and proclaim to you, God is light.” He begins with God. Why is that so.
Waiting for Godot Absurdest Play By: Samuel Beckett.
Word power Words used in performing 1. Are there any drama clubs at your school? 2. Have you ever acted in a drama? 3. In order to perform, what preparations.
Drama. A drama is a story enacted onstage for a live audience. What Is Drama?
Senior AP Literature and English 4 Tuesday. Agenda We will take clarification notes on the following in lieu of a quiz. 1.Symbolist Drama 2.Expressionism.
Theatre of the Absurd and WAITING FOR GODOT. Theatre of the Absurd coined by Martin Esslin in 1955  Defined: “drama using the abandonment of conventional.
Plays. Elements of a Play Introduction Introduction Rising Action Rising Action Climax Climax Falling Action Falling Action Conclusion Conclusion.
Introduction to the novel The Stranger by Albert Camus
Samuel Beckett Waiting for Godot.
The Theatre of Absurd Samuel Beckett ( ).
The Theatre of Absurd and
Waiting for Godot Analysis
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead
Thoughts on Did and Gogo
In-class essay beginning of next week:
Intro to Existentialism
Introduction to the novel The Stranger by Albert Camus
Satire Key Terminology
The Theatre of the Absurd
The Theatre of Absurd and
God knows        When you are tired and discouraged      from fruitless effort,     GOD knows how hard you have tried.
(Post-War drama) The Theatre of the Absurd
God knows        When you are tired and discouraged      from fruitless effort,     GOD knows how hard you have tried.
The Theatre of Absurd and
The Theatre of Absurd and
Presentation transcript:

Comedy in Waiting for Godot

Waiting for Godot is a dramatic enactment of the unrecognized absurdity in the world. The drama is absurd in two senses. In the first place, it is ridiculously funny. Placed in the perspective of eternity. In the shadow of death that the living can never forget (Where are all these corpses from? p.64), the antics with which the characters fill their short span are ridiculous. All are levelled down to the same laughable status, Estragons lament over his aching feet, Vladimirs complaints of his friends sweaty socks, games of losing, finding, swapping hats and boots, suicide attempts, debates on damnation. Waiting for Godot is a dramatic enactment of the unrecognized absurdity in the world. The drama is absurd in two senses. In the first place, it is ridiculously funny. Placed in the perspective of eternity. In the shadow of death that the living can never forget (Where are all these corpses from? p.64), the antics with which the characters fill their short span are ridiculous. All are levelled down to the same laughable status, Estragons lament over his aching feet, Vladimirs complaints of his friends sweaty socks, games of losing, finding, swapping hats and boots, suicide attempts, debates on damnation.

That particular translation of absurd as comic is Becketts translation of its other, philosophical sense. His black, obscene, pantomine humour is an attempt to being life-preserving detachment into a situation so atrocious that to view it head-on could only produce a formless cry of despair. An absurd world is a frightening one. It has in itself no norms, no absolutes, no consoling certainties, and no direction. Nothing and nobody living in it has any pre-ordained sense or purpose. To say that life is absurd is to challenge head on the two great acts of faith on which Western culture is founded- reason and religion. Confidence in reason is the basis of belief in the human ability to control the material world. Religion, especially Christianity and its personal God whose providence directs history, gives an over-arching assurance that everything is in control. These are the two languages with which Vladimir and Estragon must make sense of their world, and they would seem just empty words. That particular translation of absurd as comic is Becketts translation of its other, philosophical sense. His black, obscene, pantomine humour is an attempt to being life-preserving detachment into a situation so atrocious that to view it head-on could only produce a formless cry of despair. An absurd world is a frightening one. It has in itself no norms, no absolutes, no consoling certainties, and no direction. Nothing and nobody living in it has any pre-ordained sense or purpose. To say that life is absurd is to challenge head on the two great acts of faith on which Western culture is founded- reason and religion. Confidence in reason is the basis of belief in the human ability to control the material world. Religion, especially Christianity and its personal God whose providence directs history, gives an over-arching assurance that everything is in control. These are the two languages with which Vladimir and Estragon must make sense of their world, and they would seem just empty words.

Waiting for Godot illustrates the tensions between pathos and comedy, negation and affirmation, inertia and liveliness. The stage directions opening the first act embody such contradictions: Estragon tried to take off his boot, tugging with both hands, panting with effort. He gives up exhausted, and tries again. As before. The repetition of the action emphasizes its importance. Beckett has said that this is a mime of what the play is about, monotony. Such unsuccessful action helps Vladimir and Estragon pass the time as they persist in waiting for something better, hoping the waiting is not in vain. Beckett subtitled Waiting for Godot a tragicomedy because his clown heroes will not accept their fate as true tragedy heroes would, and here lies the comedy of the human condition. Waiting for Godot illustrates the tensions between pathos and comedy, negation and affirmation, inertia and liveliness. The stage directions opening the first act embody such contradictions: Estragon tried to take off his boot, tugging with both hands, panting with effort. He gives up exhausted, and tries again. As before. The repetition of the action emphasizes its importance. Beckett has said that this is a mime of what the play is about, monotony. Such unsuccessful action helps Vladimir and Estragon pass the time as they persist in waiting for something better, hoping the waiting is not in vain. Beckett subtitled Waiting for Godot a tragicomedy because his clown heroes will not accept their fate as true tragedy heroes would, and here lies the comedy of the human condition.

The tone of Waiting for Godot is skeptical and defiant, the humour ironical. The notions of resignation, apatheia, are firmly resisted, in this celebration of mans insistence on using his own will, however circumscribed, and determination to persist in his efforts. When Vladimir asks the blind Pozzo what he does, when he falls far from help: the answer is We wait till we can get up. Then we go on. Here the waiting and determination to go on are combined, Waiting for Godot catalogues the ploys men use to combat heroic discouragement and doubts, which makes them comic and heroic. The tone of Waiting for Godot is skeptical and defiant, the humour ironical. The notions of resignation, apatheia, are firmly resisted, in this celebration of mans insistence on using his own will, however circumscribed, and determination to persist in his efforts. When Vladimir asks the blind Pozzo what he does, when he falls far from help: the answer is We wait till we can get up. Then we go on. Here the waiting and determination to go on are combined, Waiting for Godot catalogues the ploys men use to combat heroic discouragement and doubts, which makes them comic and heroic.

The heroes of Waiting for Godot, Vladimir and Estragon, are down on their luck, but have seen better days. They are complementary, one responsive, the other aggressive, one selfless, the other self-absorbed. They relate to each other, yet long to be free, understand each other, yet are opposed. From their wranglings and changes in mood comes the ambivalent comedy. For example, Vladimir remembers landscapes and scenery. The sceptical Estrgon scoffs: You and your landscapes. Tell me about worms.: The heroes of Waiting for Godot, Vladimir and Estragon, are down on their luck, but have seen better days. They are complementary, one responsive, the other aggressive, one selfless, the other self-absorbed. They relate to each other, yet long to be free, understand each other, yet are opposed. From their wranglings and changes in mood comes the ambivalent comedy. For example, Vladimir remembers landscapes and scenery. The sceptical Estrgon scoffs: You and your landscapes. Tell me about worms.:

Waiting for Godot has become a universal metaphor for existential tedium that cannot be escaped, and comic mileage is got from criticisms not only of existence, but of the play itself. For example when Vladimir and Estragon break off at a hiatus in the development of the Lucky/Pozze theme, to criticize the inconsequentiality and vulgarity of the action, which is a metaphor for life: Waiting for Godot has become a universal metaphor for existential tedium that cannot be escaped, and comic mileage is got from criticisms not only of existence, but of the play itself. For example when Vladimir and Estragon break off at a hiatus in the development of the Lucky/Pozze theme, to criticize the inconsequentiality and vulgarity of the action, which is a metaphor for life:

V: Charming evening were having. V: Charming evening were having. E: Unforgettable. E: Unforgettable. V: And its not over. V: And its not over. E: Apparently not. E: Apparently not. V: Its only the beginning. V: Its only the beginning. E: Its awful E: Its awful V: Worse than the pantomine. V: Worse than the pantomine. E: The circus. E: The circus. V: The music hall. V: The music hall. E: The circus E: The circus

Becketts humour never takes the form of comic relief. It is never a way of punctuating the horror, of giving the audience a break from pervasive despair. It exists, rather, right at the heart of Becketts vision. Beckett is a purveyor of thrilling bleakness, beating his breast about the sorrow of the world and the awfulness of existence. His real interest is in the endless ways we think up to stave off despair, the fabulous, perverse energy we bring to the task to keep going. The words and gestures with which his people defy darkness, because they are pointless, be utterly tragic. But, because they can have no effect, they are also free and loose light, utterly gratuitous and gloriously excessive and therefore, funny. Becketts humour never takes the form of comic relief. It is never a way of punctuating the horror, of giving the audience a break from pervasive despair. It exists, rather, right at the heart of Becketts vision. Beckett is a purveyor of thrilling bleakness, beating his breast about the sorrow of the world and the awfulness of existence. His real interest is in the endless ways we think up to stave off despair, the fabulous, perverse energy we bring to the task to keep going. The words and gestures with which his people defy darkness, because they are pointless, be utterly tragic. But, because they can have no effect, they are also free and loose light, utterly gratuitous and gloriously excessive and therefore, funny.