Тірек сөздер:
гротеск, пародия, трансгрессия, субверсия.
Аңдатпа.
Де Сад шығармалары әзілсықақ тарапынан қарастырылуы тиісті.
Осы шығармада дәстүрлі әзілсықақ, трансгрессия, пародия элементтері бар. Бұл
туындыда дәтүрлі әзілсықақ элементтері, трансгрессия және қорқынышты қылмыс,
секс, адам зомбылығы және жоюшылық әлеміндегі пародиялар бар. Бұл эстетикалық
гротескадағы, яғни әзілсықақ ішіндегі шығарма екіндігі анық.
Статья поступила 31.03.2016 г.
ISSN 2411-8745
Number 1 (2016), 169 - 179
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UDC 821.111
The TheATRe oF The ABSURD AnD ITS FeATUReS on The eXAMpLe
oF S. BecKeTT’S pLAY “WAITIng FoR goDoT”
Baidildayeva A.,
student of Faculty of translation and philology,
KazUIRandWL named after Ablai khan, Almaty, Kazakhstan
Keywords:
theatre, absurd, playwright, play/Waiting for Godot, Beckett.
Abstract.
The aim of article is to reveal existentialism in Samuel Beckett’s absurdist
dramas, in the studying of the play to describe characters’ personality and hidden context
of the play. The scientific novelty is to consider Samuel Beckett’s play Waiting for Godot
from the different points of view such as literature, psychology, religion. In article we
demonstrate the analysis of the play, present information about search of purpose, seeing
myself, hopelessness, religious faith. There are fewer researches on this theme at current
time in our country. The object of the article play “Waiting for Godot” was written in
French in 1949 and then translated into English in 1954 by the Irish playwright Samuel
Beckett. This play has been performed as a drama of the absurd with astonishing success in
Europe, America and the rest of the world in post second world war era.
World War II had left British theatre in a precarious state. In London’s
West End, about a fifth of the theatres were destroyed or damaged by
bombing. In the early 1950s the star system dominated the theatre, and
one of the most prominent dramatists was Terence Rattigan. The classics,
however, were kept robustly alive by the last of the actormanagers: Sir
Donald Wolfit, Sir Laurence Olivier (later Lord Olivier), and Sir John
Gielgud. Olivier and Gielgud were supported by a generation of outstanding
actors, many of whom had begun their careers in the 1930s and were able to
adapt to changes in the theatrical climate (as well as to the growth of motion
pictures and television) through to the 1980 s.
By the mid1950s, the influence of Brecht was becoming apparent.
That year marked a turning point in British theatre, with Samuel Beckett’s
Waiting for Godot (in his own translation) introducing the Theatre of the
Absurd and John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger initiating a new wave of
antiheroic, “kitchensink” dramas. The crash of British colonialism after
World War 2 brought into being a number of anticolonial novels. The most
representative writers of anticolonial literature are G. Aldridge; N. Lewis;
D. Stewart; B. Davidson and others. The dominant theme of their novels is
the struggle of colonial and semicolonial people for their freedomj [l, 557].
Theatre of the Absurd dramatic works of certain European and
American dramatists of the 1950s and early ‘60s who agreed with the
Existentialist philosopher Albert Camus’s assessment, in his essay “The
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Myth of Sisyphus” (1942), that the human situation is essentially absurd,
devoid of purpose. The term is also loosely applied to those dramatists and
the production those works. Though no formal Absurdist movement existed
as such, dramatists as diverse as Samuel Beckett, Eugene Ionesco, Jean
Genet, Arthur Adamov, Harold Pinter, and a few others shared a pessimistic
vision of humanity struggling vainly to find a purpose and to control its fate.
Humankind in this view is left feeling hopeless, bewildered, and anxious.
The ideas that inform the plays also dictate their structure. Absurdist
playwrights, therefore, did away with most of the logical structures
of traditional theatre. There is little dramatic action as conventionally
understood; however frantically the characters perform, their busyness
serves to underscore the fact that nothing happens to change their existence.
In Beckett’s Waiting for Godot (1953), plot is eliminated, and a timeless,
circular quality emerges as two lost creatures, usually played as tramps,
spend their days waiting but without any certainty of whom they are
waiting for or of whether he, or it, will ever come. Language in an Absurdist
play is often dislocated, full of cliches, puns, repetitions, and non sequiturs
[2, 42]. Most absurdist plays have no logical plot. The absence of the plot
pushes an emphasis on proving the pointless existence of man. Quiet often,
such plays reveal the human condition at its absolute worst. The Absurdist
playwrights often used such techniques as symbolism, mime, the circus,
which are quite evident in the more popular plays of the time.
Existentialism is a philosophical movement that developed in continental
Europe during the 1800’s and 1900’s. The movement is called existentialism
because most of its members are primarily interested in the nature of
existence or being, by which they usually mean human existence. Although
the philosophers generally considered to be existentialists often disagree
with each other and sometimes even resent being classified together, they
have been grouped together because they share many problems, interests,
and ideas.
Existentialism grew out of the work of two thinkers of the 1800’s:
Soren Kierkegaard, a Danish philosopher and Protestant theologian,
who is generally considered the founder of the movement, and Friedrich
Nietzsche, a German philosopher. Edmund Husserl, a German philosopher
not usually considered an existentialist but the founder of his own
movement, phenomenology, was nevertheless one of the greatest influences
on existentialism.
The most prominent existentialist thinkers of the 1900’s include the
French writers Albert Camus, JeanPaul Sartre, and Gabriel Marcel; the
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German philosophers Karl Jaspers and Martin Heidegger; the Russian
religious and political thinker Nicolas Berdyaev; and the Jewish philosopher
Martin Buber [3, 446].
The existentialists do not make the traditional attempt to grasp the
ultimate nature of the world in abstract systems of thoughts. Instead, they
investigate what it is like to be an individual human being living in the world.
The existentialists stress the fact that every individual, even the philosopher
or scientist seeking absolute knowledge, is only a limited human being.
Thus, every person must face important and difficult decisions with only
limited knowledge and time in which to make these decisions [3, 447].
Perhaps the greatest living writer in English, and certainly the direct
follower of James Joyce in many ways, Beckett was born in Dublin, to a
family of middleclass Protestants. He attended the same school as Oscar
Wilde, and took a prize degree in Modern Languages at Trinity College,
Dublin, in 1927. Thereafter he took a post, in Paris, as a visiting lecturer in
English at the Ecole Normale Superieure. In Paris he met Joyce and became
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