English, asked by shanayanaz7253, 5 hours ago

explain the themes of alienation and mentle torment in the play

Answers

Answered by ganeshviswanadham00
2

Answer:

Answer: The themes of the play are death and old age, reminiscence and regret of past, attitude of the society towards a person who has taken acting as his career, disillusionment and false ideals, alienation and suffering. ... b) The theme of 'alienation' and 'mental torment' in 'The Swan Song'.

Answered by hyacinth98
0

The subjects of estrangement and execution are focal in the play, and each relates straightforwardly to the awfulness of Willy's life.

The dead

  • One of the chief subjects communicated in pioneer writing is estrangement; this theme can be found in James Joyce's story "The Dead", T.S. Eliot's sonnet The Waste Land, and Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness. Each piece brings out the thought or sensation of estrangement in a one of a kind way.
  • James Joyce's "The Dead" is a brief tale which presents the subject of alienation essentially through the focal person: Gabriel Conroy. Gabriel's participation at a Christmas celebration facilitated by his aunties is combined with a sensation of separation and repugnance for social exercises.
  • Gabriel yearns to get away from the organization of individuals at the party; he longs to go external vulnerable and stroll alongside the waterway as opposed to associating with those inside (Joyce 2355). Gabriel is socially estranged in light of his "loss of motion of will, energy and creative mind" (Stevenson 49).
  • This is particularly obvious in his bombed endeavors to associate seriously with Lily, Miss Ivors, and his better half, Gretta. Both Lily and Miss Ivors make statements which cause Gabriel to feel restless and awkward in light of the fact that he can't discuss successfully with them; Gabriel doesn't try to defeat conflicts and subsequently he continually looks for break and confinement.
  • Gabriel's actual yearning for his better half isn't responded by her; Gretta's thoughtfulness and her absence of consciousness of Gabriel's sentiments detach Gabriel to the point that he is at last compelled to inspect his own sentiments and his past. As of now, Gabriel comprehends that as he is alienated from other people, he is additionally alienated from himself.
  • It is the consummation of "The Dead" which exemplifies the innovator topic of distance. In the same way as other different characters made by James Joyce, Gabriel encounters a revelation toward the finish of "The Dead". Gabriel's enlivening is certainly not a genuinely sure one; the revelation is his actual acknowledgment of detachment.

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