Friday, February 21, 2014

4000 Miles

A motif in 4000 miles is the poor communication between Vera and Joe. They often talk over one another but never actually hear the other. This is seen by the back slashes in the text indicating they are talking over one another. Also, their poor communication is highlighted in such scenes like when Joe opens up to his grandma and then she reveals to us at the end that she doesn't have her hearing aid  in.

JUDITH

What is the Major Dramatic Question in Judith? I think that the MDQ is, "Will Judith be loved?" Another possible MDQ is, "will Judith get the respect/power she thinks she deserves?" I think it could be either one of these questions because they are both yes/no questions. And also, this would explain Judith's actions after the general is dead. It would explain why she attempts to have sex with a corpse and then why she makes her servant worship her. I think the answer to both of these questions is yes because we see the servant worship her for "what she will be" and there is a foreshadowing that she will mean something great to Israel.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Night, Mother

I think the MDQ (Major Dramatic Question) is not simply, "will Jessie kill herself?" but more something along the lines of, "will Mama come to terms with Jessie killing herself?" The entirety of the play is spent talking about Jessie killing herself and why and then Jessie tells Mama she wants her to do a few things when she is gone. And Mama begs her not to and tries to persuade her otherwise so the major dramatic question could be, "will Mama succeed in dissuading Jessie from killing herself?" but I don't think it is quite as simple as that either because if that was the MDQ, the play would've ended the moment Jessie killed herself. But the play does not end the moment Jessie kills herself. The play continues to Mama grabbing the hot chocolate pan and the phone and dialing Loretta's number and asking to speak to Dawson. That is why I said, "will Mama comes to terms with Jessie killing herself?" Not like you could ever understand why your daughter would end her own life in your house after telling you about it. That is why the question wasn't, "will Mama understand?" it was, "will Mama come to terms with?" And I think 'coming to terms with' is more like, "will Mama do the things Jessie asked her to when she dies?" Mama threatens Jessie at one point saying that when she died, she wouldn't do any of the things Jessie asked of her. But we see, at the end of the play that this is not true. Mama does everything Jessie told her to, exactly like she told her to do it. So the answer to that question would be, yes. Because it has a yes or no answer, my question, "will Mama come to terms with Jessie killing herself?" functions properly as a MDQ.

Trifles

I think the play Trifles was especially intriguing because of the dynamics of the women and the men. Trifles being another semi-feminist drama, critiquing societies ideas of gender roles. The men disrespected and disregarded anything Minnie did as important even though they were considering Minnie as their prime suspect. The women, minding their own business and collecting things to bring Minnie, happen upon the pieces of the puzzle that solve the murder.
Then, the women choose to conceal the evidence (the dead bird) that would convict Minnie. The men, trumping around upstairs, never find any evidence that could convict Minnie. Had they not allowed the ideology that women are unimportant to cloud their judgment, they would've looked about Minnie's "womanly things" and located the evidence to convict her of the crime they were attempting to pin on her.

Overtones

I found the play Overtones fascinating because of the issues of gender roles that it addressed. It was interesting to see Maggie and Hetty representing the inner thoughts and primitive nature of Margaret and Harriet, these two women oppressed by their society. For the time that this play was written, this was a scandalous choice of content because women didn’t talk about how they felt. The first wave of the feminist movement didn’t even start until the late 50’s so Gerstenberg was way ahead of her time. Even though this play didn’t kick off the feminist movement or start a fire, I think it is cool that it began a very important dialogue about gender roles and gender oppression. I think that is the point of the theatre; theatre is a living and active method of story telling that engages the audience. I think it should begin a dialogue and if it can begin a dialogue about important societal issues, then why not?