Friday, January 17, 2020
A Doll House Vs The Piano Lesson
Writers of the eighteenth and nineteenth century were the voice of the people and from their words; one can feel the smell of revolution against prejudices of the contemporary society.They embossed real life in their words, which they had seen and experienced and showed the majestic human spirit who always find themselves in the midst of conflicts arising partly from the Society and partly from the inner self and consciousness. In the nineteenth century was born among the many writers, a play writer that broke the shackles of the dominant Patriarchy society of the eighteenth century to give voice to the women behind the four walls of their Doll House.A father of modern realistic drama, Henrik Ibsen, was a Norwegian play writer who was charged of being scandalous only because he had examined the realities of life that lay behind many facades and social obequities.Another of the same genere was Wilson who won the Pulitzer Prize of 1992 due to his enduring words that raised the consciou sness of the Blacks. Spent his childhood also in poverty in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, where he lived with his parents and five siblings, he made his goal to shed the light on the sufferings that their ancestors had to go through among younger generations of blacks.Wilson himself realized this fact that his parents had withheld from them the knowledge of even greater hardships that they had endured themselves. He once told New York Times in 1984, ââ¬Å"My generation of blacks knew very little about the past of our parents, they shielded us from the indignities they suffered.â⬠(Gale Research, Autobiography of Wilson, Para.7). His Piano Lesson was one among his many works that eludes us to the greater revelations- the revelations of ourselves, and our association with our golden heritage.à à à à à à à à à à à Both Ibsen and Wilson were the mouthpieces of the suppressed and subjugated. In 1871 before Ibsen even started his play, a real incident touched his s oul. One day Ibsen got infatuated by a Norwegian girl named Laura Petersen, whom he called skylark. But in 1872 Laura married a Danish schoolmaster, Victor Kieler, but as soon as she married, her husband Victor contracted tuberculosis, but as they were poor they could not manage to go, so without her husbandââ¬â¢s knowledge Laura arranged a loan. With this money they went to Italy and Victor soon recovered. But later the humiliation that Laura suffered was unbearable.When she was forced to tell the truth to her husband regarding the loan, she was abused and Victor straightforwardly found her unfit to be his wife. Laura could not tolerate and she had a nervous breakdown, but in return Victor admitted her in a public asylum.This incident prompted Ibsen to show the Society its true face. Thus emerged from his immense delicate soul, the master the most beautiful play, A Doll House; a play which is a struggle against the tyrannical and dehumanizing oppression of women in a society whi ch frowned upon the women who asserted themselves for individuality.Nora is suppressed in number of ways by her husband Torvald and tyrannical social conventions. Torvald is a smug bank manager and with his job he has number of responsibilities. He treats his wife as if she is her responsibility and a mere product. Torvald is more worried about his reputation but he least cares about her.Though Nora is financial well off yet there is not a single incidence in her life when she does not face rebuke by her husband. On the onset their marriage life seems to be satisfied, yet time and again Noraââ¬â¢s heart was burning like fire seeking Independence from the subjugation of her husband. Yet she fulfills her duty as a wife, and here is the hidden irony. Nora also took loan to save her husbandââ¬â¢s life, but instead of credit she gets only rebuke from her husband.As the play moves forward, she realizes how she has to remain subjugated in her parents house and now as a wife too, and how her marriage is only a mere game of a Doll, so unrealistic. So when Helmer tells Nora, ââ¬Å"Because such an atmosphere of lies infects and poisons the whole life of a home.Each breath the children take in such a house is full of the germs of evil,â⬠Nora decides to discontinue her inauthentic role of a doll and closed the doors of domesticity to seek out her individuality, but that too she could attain at the cost of her children.She has to leave her children behind so that they do not get corrupted. In the end of the play, her assertion comes straightaway from her mouthà when she says, ââ¬Å"I've been your wife-doll here, just as at home I was Papa's doll-child.â⬠(1608).This is Nora and theare are Boy Willie and his sister, Bernice in the Piano Lessons who learned to cherish their heritage and assert their rights as human beings. Piano Lesson has a quintessential plot that revolves around a conflict.It appears on the surface that the conflict that is going on is between Boy Willie and his sister, Bernice, but hidden beneath lies the conflict for preserving their heritage and culture, which is in the form of Piano. Boy Willie wants to sell Piano to buy a land for good fortune. What he was visualizing was the future which is the dream of Westernized world of younger generations, whereas Bernice wants to stay firm to her roots, and declines to part with the heritage.The piano was reminder of her past. It was her fatherââ¬â¢s piano, who died retrieving it from the Sutterââ¬â¢s home. The unique thing about Piano are the engravings of the history of Charles family on it and for Bernice the souls of their ancestors reside in the Piano. It is the Piano only that joins them to their ancestors.The story of Piano dates back to the middle of the nineteenth century, when the Charles family were slaves, their owners Sutters sold two members of the family for a piano. Sutters then got the Charles pictures of Charles family engraved on Piano, but th e carpenter carved whole history of the family into it. This instrument was then stolen by their father who was later killed by the Sutters in retribution.With this piano, August Wilson firmly evokes into the heart of the todayââ¬â¢s generation the reality of theà black people in American Society and how they assimilate into the White people, it simply means to give up their black culture and adopt the Westernized ways.When the Doll House was staged in 1879, the spirit of revolution was ravaging like a fire in Europe and writers inculcated in their writings new thoughts and new perceptions of life which totally defied the old conventions. Wth his colloquial language, Ibsen inserts the burning passion of Independent thoughts which allows the A Dollââ¬â¢s house to achieve laurels inspite of criticism.On the other hand, The Piano Lesson was set in Pittsburgh in 1930 when there was Great Depression which became historical background for the play. At that time, the black migrati on was also at the peak. They were migratinog from south to north in search of better life.This all inspired Wilson but inspiration of the play, he got from Romare Bearden painting by the same name. In the painting was shown a teacher and a student in a form of an an allegory which means that how African Americans should associate themselves with their past.Thus in their writings, inconsequent streamsà of thoughts, longings, apprehensions, and musings pour out as they arise in the mind of all and thus emerge the consciousness of Individuality, Freedom, and Independence.WORKS CITED1. Gale, ââ¬Å"Biography of August Wilsonâ⬠Internet (Last Updated: Available: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~awilson/bio.html, May 11, 20072.à à Spark Notes, ââ¬Å"The Piano Lesson by August Wilsonâ⬠Internet Available:http://www.sparknotes.com/drama/piano/context.html, May 11, 20073. Templeton, Joan. Ibsen's Women. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 19974. Wikipedia, ââ¬Å"A Doll's Hou seâ⬠Internet (Last Updated May 08, 2007) Available:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Doll's_House, May 11, 2007 à A Doll House Vs The Piano Lesson Words from the writersââ¬â¢ literary artifacts touches rhythm of the complexities of life and make us realize what we are and where we stand in this world and in the Society around us.From the words of the Writers, immerses the rich flavor of the real meaning of the life and the voice of the repressed and subjugated. Ibsen and Wilson reveal the majestic human spirit in their capacity of striving and suffering.. On one hand, Doll house is in reality a Doll House for women subjugated and repressed in the Patriarchy society of 18th century and on the other hand is the Piano lesson which is a voice of the Blacks who in the eighteenth century were kept as emotionless and subjugated slaves.In A Dollââ¬â¢s House, Ibsen paints the sacrificial role that woman has to play and the way protagonist of the play has to exert her feeling. In Piano lesson, the real conflict lies in the efforts of the Protagonists to maintain their family, heritage and exploration in the back drop of all the har dships their ancestors have to undergo.The piano is a representative of the culture and heritage and is a center of conflict for the protagonist whether to sell it for buying land previously worked by their slave ancestors or remains in the familyââ¬â¢s possession as a heritage.Ibsen presented ââ¬Å"A Doll houseâ⬠in 1879 in the backdrop of the Victorian Society, the society wherein woman has to subjugate her according to the husbandââ¬â¢s will.For the nineteenth century audience, the mere idea of woman leaving aside her marriage wows was considered as sacrilegious and, women abandoning her children were against the basic concepts of womanhood. In the end of the play Society won, as Ibsen was forced to write alternative ending of the play when it was staged in Germany.Nora as a wife of a banker has to maintain her relationship with her kids and her husband who both tries to control the family.In the play, Nora is a financially well off as compared to the other female cha racters in the play, but she leads a very difficult life because society demands dominant partner in Torvald, who issues decrees and condescends to Nora.On the other hand, in their hard times in order to save her husbandââ¬â¢s life, she goes to the extent of forging her fatherââ¬â¢s name on the document for money but hides it from him. When the truth unfolds, he reacts with disgust and horror. He is only worried about his reputation but refuses to accept the fact it was her love that prompted her to do so. And due to this reason, Nora is considered as a cheat and her deception, left vulnerable to Krogstadââ¬â¢s blackmail.It was the real incident in Ibsenââ¬â¢s life that prompted him to write a play. It was 1871, eight years before Henrik Ibsen wrote A Dollââ¬â¢s House, Ibsen met a Norwegian girl named Laura Petersen, whom he called skylark and was infatuated by her.In 1872, Laura married a Danish schoolmaster, Victor Kieler, and her nightmares started. Victor contract ed tuberculosis, and his doctors prescribed warmer climate for him but as they were poor, Victor became hysterical. At this Laura arranged a loan without her husband's knowledge. With this money they went to Italy and Victor soon recovered. When the time came for Laura to repay the loan, they did not have the money to pay and Laura tried to send forged check but it was discovered and Laura finally had to tell the truth to her husband, who found her unfit as a wife.She had nervous breakdown, and in return Victor admitted her in a public asylum. Touched by this story, in the notes to The Dolls house, he said, ââ¬Å"A woman cannot be herself in modern society, with laws made by men and with prosecutors and judges who assess female conduct from a male standpointâ⬠. (Yurgaitis, A Dollââ¬â¢s House Synopsis, Para. 15).The indifferent attitude of Noraââ¬â¢s husband destroyed her illusions and decides to leave him, her children and house in search of truth. She has realized that he is not the noble man she has supposed him. In the words of Isben ââ¬Å"Depressed and confused by her faith in authority, she loses faith in her moral right and ability to bring up her children. A mother in contemporary society, just as certain insects go away and die when she has done her duty in the propagation of the race.â⬠(Wikipedia, Para 5)August Wilson, was himself a black man and as a black man he realized what hardships the blacks had to endure in their lives and as slaves. As Pulitzer Prize winner, he confided in his students at Dartmouth University, ââ¬Å"My generation of blacks knew very little about the past of our parents.They shielded us from the indignities they suffered,â⬠(Dartmouth, Biography of August Wilson, Sidelights Para1) and in a quest to impart the knowledge to the unspoken African American people, he gave to the world ââ¬Å"The Piano Lessonâ⬠and many other plays.The characters Berniece and Boy Willie in the Piano Lessons struggle amo ng themselves, Willie wants to sell a Piano to buy a land but Berniece refuses because she had an attachment towards the piano. It was her fatherââ¬â¢s piano, who died retrieving it from the Sutterââ¬â¢s home. On the piano is engraved the history of Charles family and is only there ancestral property.The incident happened in the middle of the nineteenth century, when the Charles family was slave, their owners Sutters sold two members of the family for a piano. Sutters then called upon master-carpenter in the Charles family and ordered him to carve out the only faces of the sold slaves into the piano, but the carpenter carved whole history of the family into the piano. This instrument was then stolen by Berniece and Boy Willie's father, but was later killed by the Sutters in retribution.For Berneice, this piano is a ââ¬Å"sacred altarâ⬠, considered by ancient African tribes as a crossroad between the living and the dead. It was her belief that by selling Piano, they will loose all the connection with her ancestors and also their protection, which may give the way to Sutterââ¬â¢s ghost to haunt them. Michael Morales too argues that this piano serves as a direct link to the past and is both a ââ¬Å"sacred ancestral altarâ⬠and a tool to ââ¬Å"transmitâ⬠oral history.Through the songs in a Piano, carvings and the words of Willie, August Wilson makes the audience have a deeper look at their forgotten past. At the end of the play Willie reminds Berniece to continue playing the piano and warns her about the worst consequences if she neglects her past again. And along with that Willie left his mark on the piano, by inscribing on it the history of the family's in readable language with the sole purpose of preservation and continuation of the family's legacy.
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