Play Endgame By Samuel Beckett. The Writer Term Paper

PAGES
4
WORDS
1127
Cite

¶ … play "Endgame" by Samuel Beckett. The writer of this paper examines the theme, style and other elements of the play while examining the contextual and stylistic elements of the work. There was one source used to complete this paper. Throughout history playwrights have used their work to illustrate the complicated foundation of human relationships. Whether it is a love story, a family story or another type of relationship, playwrights uncover the hidden emotions and nuances that come into play with regard to human love and hate. Samuel Beckett, who has been referred to by experts as one of the most talented playwrights in history, produced a classic piece of literature when he penned Endgame. Endgame underscores the pain and struggle that human relationships endure when founded in pain and human suffering. The two main characters in Endgame consist of a man who is chair bound and his lifetime caretaker. Beckett provides a perfect illustration of the embodiment of Modernism.

While the relationship between the sickly and the caretaker is used to explore the entire theme it is done in a manner that works. The caretaker seems to want to break away from the man in the chair but instead is driven from window to window at the man's command The illustration of modernism can be clearly picked out and defined if one knows how to examine the play for its elements.

Hamm is the actual illustration of Modernism with Clove acting as a springboard for the illustration. Hamms way of speaking, his actions and the fact...

...

Beckett uses the character of Hamm to depict many aspects of modernism including the long and drawn out journey. Hamm portrays the Modernism through many avenues but two of the most important elements are his tired and pestilent nature.
For one to see the way the play presents an example of Modernism and its struggle against Romantisism one only has to look at the relationship between Hamm, Nell and Nagg. Hamm's reactions to both of them is a classic illustration of the struggle between Modernism and Romanticism. The threatening and being threatened that occurs between the characters presents a metaphoric example of the struggle Modernism launches against Romantcism.

The character of Hamm provides many examples of the fight against Romanticism by Modernism. Hamm shows anger and disgust for the two which is the way of Modernism against Romanticism. If one has a difficult time exploring the theme of Modernism as it is illustrated through the relationship between Hamm and Nagg and Nell one can view it as a teen fighting against a parent. As teens grow older and start becoming young adults of their own they naturally tend to fight against the parents who have raised them. This path is taken for the purpose of the teen eventually emerging as a self propelled and capable adult who still uses certain elements that the parents have provided along the way. This is something that most people can understand because it is a natural and healthy progression from life, though being in the throes of the path either as the parents or the child it can be extremely stressful. This is the same situation that occurs in the play Endgame by Samuel Beckett. Hamm fights against Nell and Nagg in…

Sources Used in Documents:

Reading Beckett's Endgame as an Allegory of Literary Decay

By, J.A. Tyler (Accessed 9-28-2003)

http://www.although.nu/archives/000022.html


Cite this Document:

"Play Endgame By Samuel Beckett The Writer" (2003, September 28) Retrieved April 25, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/play-endgame-by-samuel-beckett-the-writer-155005

"Play Endgame By Samuel Beckett The Writer" 28 September 2003. Web.25 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/play-endgame-by-samuel-beckett-the-writer-155005>

"Play Endgame By Samuel Beckett The Writer", 28 September 2003, Accessed.25 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/play-endgame-by-samuel-beckett-the-writer-155005

Related Documents

Creation is unending carnage, a cycle of bloodiness that must be broken, and can be broken, Hughes suggests. Death owns all, even crow's feet and beak, but despite this knowledge, rather than retreating to a room, or dreaming of a false past, like Beckett's characters, Crow wrangles with the elements in anger and incantation. Although Beckett may not find a solution in "Endgame," Beckett is not entirely hopeless. Beckett does

Such a parsing of into which school Samuel Beckett can be slotted may seem to be nothing more than intellectual engagement -- not that there is anything wrong with this -- but it also serves as an important way of assessing both the "Irishness" and the humor of Beckett's writings. Unlike a writer like John Synge, for example, or William Butler Yeats, Beckett is generally not clearly identifiable as Irish