English, asked by deepalirathod006, 8 months ago

explain with reference to contex
'not one gentleman caller? it cant be true! there must be a flood, there must have been a tornado"​

Answers

Answered by Deepthika6aSgips
1

Answer:

The Gentleman Caller in the Context of 21st Century Europe:

Translation of Tennessee Williams’s Symbols into Serbian

Deepthika Talluri

Abstract:

Breaking from the constraints of the “exhausted” realistic plays of his day with a view to achieving a “more penetrating and vivid expression of things”, Tennessee Williams resorted to the unconventional techniques of expressionism immersing himself in the world of symbols. This paper will explore the versatile role and meanings of the Gentleman Caller as a repetitive, reverberating and omnipresent symbol from Williams’s

celebrated The Glass Menagerie. Unfolding the wide range of meanings of the Gentleman Caller, the paper will go on to analyze its recent translations into Serbian,

attempting to show that the impossibility of finding an equivalent comprehensive umbrella term in Serbian and the necessity to break the repetitiveness and vary the

solutions from context to context, greatly affect the symbolism and literary and dramatic effects produced in the original piece. Thus, even in the context of, in translational terms, enlightened 21st century Europe, with literary translation activity consciously preceded by thorough stylistic analysis, some literary effects appear to remain elusive.

Expressionism and all other unconventional techniques in drama have only one valid aim, and that is a closer approach to truth. When a play employs unconventional techniques, it is not, or certainly shouldn’t be, trying to escape its responsibility of dealing with reality, or interpreting experience, but is actually or should be attempting to find a closer approach, a more penetrating and vivid expression of things as they are....truth, life or reality is an organic thing which

the poetic imagination can represent or suggest, in essence, only through transformation, through changing into other forms than those which were merely

present in appearance (Williams 395). This is what Tennessee Williams, one of the most celebrated American dramatists,

rivalled only by Eugene O'Neill and Arthur Miller (Kolin ix), wrote in the Production Notes, a preface to his renowned and award-wiiing play, The Glass Menagerie. In this

preface, he expressed his views on theatre and art in general, as well as his vision of artistic devices, used to represent life and truth, making one of his major aesthetic

statements (Kolin 43). This is what he did in practice in his numerous plays. In his partial deviation from realism, Tennessee used unconventional techniques, staying away from the photographic in art and regarding it as insignificant. With these techniques, he

transformed reality and the world around him in an attempt to capture universal truths. On the way to transformation, Williams created what he called “plastic theatre”,

stressing the importance of combination of all staging elements. He also resorted to poetry and poetic devices, his first love that he never abandoned.

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Deepthika Talluri

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

Some one has called to an emergency helpline no. like a fire force and said something. Some dangerous thing have happened.

Explanation:

Some one or a group of people have called in a hurry and asked to fix a problem like a electrical issue or a fire that spread or something like that, which need professional help. They have recieved a panic call. The caller hasn't mentioned how something happened but only had only asked for help. So, the receiver is assuming what would have happened at the other end.

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