Modern and post modern plays Essay

Modern and post modern plays
Modern and post modern plays

Modern and post modern plays

Order Instructions:

Clarify as best as you can, the difference between modernity, modernism and postmodernism, according to Mary Klages’s definitions and the other items posted in the course. Write at least 600 words. Quote BRIEFLY from her essay throughout your posting. Most of the writing should be your own words. The ratio of your own writing to quotes should be about 4 to 1. Paragraph your ideas. Organization is important. Try to bring some insight to the discussion. You will be graded on organization, your use of quotes from the item posted in the course, and the insight you bring to the ideas. You MUST use quotation marks and cite your the works you use with a Works Cited page. If you do not include quotes from the course items, quotation marks, a Works Cited page, and if your response is shorter than 600 words, you will be automatically graded down for not fulfilling the basic requirements.

900 – 1200 word. You will discuss the ways in which Death of a Salesman is a modern play, according to Klages’s essay, and the ways in which David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross is a postmodern answer to Arthur Miller’s play. Read the entire explanation below before starting your paper. At the end of the explanation are some parameters for the paper.

In your final paper, you are to use Miller’s essay (as opposed to his play) and Klages’s essay to discuss how one play is modern and the other postmodern. 

Create an introduction that ends in a thesis (the main idea of your paper).

Create at least two body paragraphs (though there can be more). Each body paragraph should start with at topic sentence that captures the main ideas of the paragraph. The topic sentences SHOULD NOT be a statement about what happens in the play. It should state the ideas the student wishes to discuss in the paragraph. Following the topic sentence students will develop those ideas with explanation that is supported by both the essays and the play.

Use MLA citations in the paper and create a Works Cited page. Use the Owl Purdue website at http://owl.english.purdue.edu to answer your questions on MLA. Turn the final paper in by the due date.

Your paper will be graded on the following:

  • Understanding of the concepts (are the concepts of modernism, postmodernism, and tragedy clear?)
  • Structure (is there an introduction? a thesis? topic sentences?)
  • Development (are the ideas developed with enough explanation and textual support in the form of brief quotes? Are the paragraphs clear and do they hold together?)
  • Understanding of the plays (is there enough information about the plays to show real depth of understanding?)
  • Use of MLA (is it correct? Is there a Works Cited page that is also in correct format?)
  • Grammar and spelling

SAMPLE ANSWER

Both plays are about salesmen and the effects of unbridled capitalism on the human psyche. Miller’s take on this theme is decidedly modern. Miller’s modernist views are clear in the plot and characters of the play, but they are also underlined in Miller’s essay about tragedy, where he defends the notion of a modern tragic hero. Tragedy is a classical concept, but Miller reworks that idea and turns it into a modern concept (not a postmodern one). One of the most important ways in which Miller’s play is modern has to do with the idea that modern writers “try to uphold the idea that works of art can provide the unity, coherence, and meaning which has been lost in most of modern life; art will do what other human institutions fail to do” (Klages).

Clearly, in Miller’s view, the institutions of capitalism have failed to provide Willy with a meaningful life. Willy cannot buy his way into meaning, though he tries; nor can he work his way into meaning, though he tries. Not only is this failure a problem for Willy, but it is a problem for many Americans in Miller’s world. Willy represents an American Everyman. The character personifies the typical working stiff in Miller’s imagination. Willy Loman is truly a low man within the capitalist hierarchy. As such, his life has little meaning within the capitalist system. But in writing his play, Miller attempts to give Willy’s life meaning. He attempts to provide “what other human institutions fail to do” (Klages).  Updating the classical form of tragedy, Miller attempts to do for Willy, and all men like him, what money and capitalism can’t – provide meaning for his existence to the rest of the world. And thus, Willy’s story becomes a dire warning to everyone in the audience, telling them to ignore the lure of money and try to do something of value with their lives. “He never knew who he was,” says Biff of his father (Miller 2391). And that is Willy’s greatest tragedy. In his attempt to achieve the capitalist dream of riches, he loses his soul.

Mamet’s play gives us an altogether different take on capitalism – different, not better. His play is decidedly postmodern. And he knows he is writing in the very long shadow of Arthur Miller, who was one of America’s greatest living playwrights at the time Mamet wrote his play (Miller has since died). Where Miller saw tragedy and sadness, Mamet sees the farcical horrors of a system that would grind up men for a Cadillac. And while Miller tries to create meaning from Willy’s tragic life, Mamet’s play makes no claims to creating meaning out of the pathetic lives of his characters. His characters live very provisional lives; in fact, the entire plot hinges of the provision of each man getting his name on the board. But Mamet’s play “doesn’t lament the idea of [the]  . . . provisionality, or incoherence” of his characters’ lives; instead Mamet’s play says something along the lines of “let’s not pretend that art can make meaning . . . let’s just play with nonsense” (Klages).

His playfulness is clear in the dark comedy of the play. Unlike Miller’s play, Mamet’s is very funny (one good reason to see the film is that it’s easier to get the comedy). That doesn’t stop it from presenting a very, very dark vision of humanity, but Mamet makes no claims to providing an answer to that darkness. He just examines it and holds it up to the theatrical lights for his audience to examine as well. Another way he uses playfulness is in the dialogue. He takes the way he’s heard men speaking to each other and exaggerates it. The characters are left with little besides profanity to express the rage, disappointment, fear, and horror they feel at the condition of their own lonely lives. Thus, this play is NOT modern because as sad as these characters might be, they do not give us one of the fundamental pieces of tragedy that a modern play does: in a modernist play’s attempt to provide meaning it must provide catharsis for the audience. Catharsis, that rush of feeling that comes at the end of all tragedies (whether they are classical or modern), is what makes the audience feel like they want to make better choices than Willy did after seeing the play. Both Aristotle and Miller discuss the importance of catharsis in tragedy. Mamet’s play provides no catharsis and is not tragic or modern. It is postmodern, especially in the way it offers us no answers and no meaning beyond the experience of enjoying or being repulsed by the world he creates for us in his play.

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