English, asked by parassharma40, 8 months ago

discuss the theme of the play,'the proposal,.​

Answers

Answered by manas7083
63

Answer:

The major theme of Chekhov's The Proposal is the cold approach to marriage that had been common in nineteenth-century Russia, especially among the wealthy. The play, as a satire for this money-driven type of marriage, depicts the two main characters as excessively posh and desperately wanting to wed each other for economic security, blind to the fact they would not get along well.

OR

In this one-act play, Chekhov satirizes marriage conventions among the land-owning aristocracy of Russia in the nineteenth century. The characters of Natalya Stepanovna, who is twenty-five years old, and Ivan Vassilevitch Lomov, who is thirty-five years old, are so ill-suited to one another that it seems they will not even have a "honeymoon phase" of their relationship.

Normally, the beginnings of relationships are all fun and romance and flirtation, but the beginning of this relationship is all fighting and arguing and name-calling! If this is how these two behave in the beginning of a relationship, imagine how they might treat each other five or ten or twenty years in!

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Answered by marishthangaraj
13

Theme of the play, the proposal.

EXPLANATION:

  • The fundamental theme of Chekhov's The Proposal is the cold technique to marriage, that had been not unusual in nineteenth-century Russia, particularly among the rich.  
  • The play, as a satire for this cash driven sort of marriage, depicts the 2 major characters as excessively posh and
  • Desperately trying to marry each other for monetary protection, ignorant of the truth they could not get along nicely.
  • Chekhov depicts the 3 characters as being so stubborn that they cannot admit being wrong.  
  • Natalya tells Lomov she was incorrect proudly owning Oxen Meadows, but she without a doubt doesn't accept with it.  
  • She simply says this to get Lomov to suggest to her.  
  • Chekhov satirizes the characters stubbornness over Oxen Meadows because landowners believed in their proper to personal big amounts of land and would in no way take into account budging in this role.
  • Finally, Chekhov shows the characters as valuing superficial appearance over substance.  
  • They give the arrival of being residents who aid traditional values, including marriage.
  • However, by his depiction of Lomov, Natalya, and Chubukov, Chekhov suggests that for some landowners this look is fake.
  • What they definitely care about is proudly owning land and performing virtuous and, at the same time as in fact they care little about Christian values.  
  • For example, as opposed to being kind to each other, they're mean and infantile.
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