Thursday, October 10, 2019
Discuss Frielââ¬â¢s presentation Essay
In the time ââ¬ËDancing at Lughnasaââ¬â¢ was set Gerry and Chrisââ¬â¢s relationship would have been extremely unorthodox and would have circulated a lot of town gossip. Having a child out of wedlock was extremely shocking and making the decision to then keep Michael even more so. In 1936 women had very few rights and with the shock of Michael being born only the towns respect for their brother, a missionary, kept them from being societal lepers. Friel presents the relationship between Gerry and Chris by using stage directions to show the true feelings between them and how their relationship is sustained. Having Gerry and Chris talking in the garden while the four other sisters are inside listening intently shows how little privacy the two have in their relationship. When Gerry first arrives Chris appears extremely cold and offhand in front of him using one word answers ââ¬ËChris: Hello, Gerryâ⬠¦ yesâ⬠¦yes. ââ¬â¢ All of this gives the impression that she has very little time for him and doesnââ¬â¢t particularly care about him. However Frielââ¬â¢s staging shows the audience that she really does care because we see her reaction before Gerry comes on stage. Friel portrays her as standing stock still in shock then, when coming to her senses, rushing around panicking, ââ¬Ëadroitly adjusts her hair and clothes. ââ¬â¢ It is the panic before the extract that shows her much Chris truly does care about Gerry and also about how little the sisters have in their lives due to the their scramble to make themselves presentable. This highlights how Gerry is a key romantic figure in the play because even though all the while the sisters are saying ââ¬ËKate: He wonââ¬â¢t stay the night hereââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËRose: I hate him!ââ¬â¢ they still all end up crowding around the window to listen in and watch, suggesting that though disapproving they still half wish to be in Chrisââ¬â¢s shoes. The social constraints of the situation lead them to wanting Gerry out of the families lives, but still the desire is there through the constant comments. These comments are key to the suggestion of an invasion of privacy, ââ¬ËMaggie: you should see the way sheââ¬â¢s looking at himâ⬠¦Kate: theyââ¬â¢re not still talking are they? ââ¬â¢ Friel is trying to show how hard it must be for Gerry and Chris to live in such an enclosed area where everyone knows everyoneââ¬â¢s business, thus exploring a theme of romance, or lack of romance. This is continued throughout the extract, the fact that Gerry never visits ââ¬ËChris: 13 monthsââ¬â¢ making the relationship seem very one sided ââ¬â Chris remembering the last visit to the day while Gerry canââ¬â¢t remember the month. Gerry proposes to Chris at the very end of the extract and this gives a sign that maybe he does care about her. Even though Chris turns him down there is still the slight remembrance of this moment throughout the rest of the play, leading to the audiences opinion that maybe Gerry does truly care for Chris despite leaving her alone with child. However through Michaelââ¬â¢s narrative closer to the end of the play in the second act we find out that Gerry already had ââ¬Ëa wife and three grown childrenââ¬â¢, Friel choosing to leave this revelation till the end to produce a far more dramatic climax to their relationship. It is then that the audience realises that Gerry never intended to marry Chris and only offered in the knowledge that she would refuse. This all gives the impression that there is never any real closeness or intimacy for the two of them and the whole summer of happiness before, ââ¬Ësuddenly he takes her in his arms and dance. ââ¬â¢ was a lie. A large influence on Friel when writing ââ¬ËDancing at Lughnasaââ¬â¢ was the changing role of women in society. Thatcher had just been Prime Minister and womenââ¬â¢s rights were becoming much more accepted in the 1990ââ¬â¢s, perhaps why Friel chose to make this such a large part of the play. Set in 1936 the Mundy sisters would not have been at all accepted by society with Chris having Michael out of wedlock and then deciding to keep him. Changing attitudes within society would have influenced Frielââ¬â¢s interpretation of Chris and Gerryââ¬â¢s relationship. Friel depicted this family as an example of what is yet to come, the sisters supported Chris throughout and after her pregnancy even though it went against societies beliefs, thus inflicting Chrisââ¬â¢s embarrassment upon themselves as well yet still sticking together as a family. Friel emphasizes that women should have the right to do as they please through the disruption of outside influences. At the beginning of the play the sisters are happy in their little bubble making jokes about the outside world ââ¬ËMaggie: steady on girl, today its lipstick; tomorrow itââ¬â¢s the gin bottleââ¬â¢ although never participating in it. Itââ¬â¢s when they begin to allow others into their circle that things begin to go down hill for them. Before Gerryââ¬â¢s arrival they were all dancing and laughing but his arrival marked a change for them all, Friel perhaps suggesting that women donââ¬â¢t need the influences of men and all they bring with them is destruction. Danny Bradley and Rose are another example of this, the death of Roseââ¬â¢s defenceless white rooster is symbolic of mans predatory nature and the violence of this act implies violence between Rose and Bradley. Therefore Friel is portraying women as stronger without the male interference, Chris and Gerryââ¬â¢s relationship is used to highlight this as it is obvious to the audience that Chris would have been better off without Gerry in the first place but it is this continued procrastinating relationship that truly destroys her. The audience views Chris and Gerryââ¬â¢s relationship with trepidation throughout the play due to Frielââ¬â¢s depiction of him as a stereotypical womaniser. Kate calls him a ââ¬ËLoafer! Wastrel! ââ¬â¢ but conveniently neglects to mention the obvious charisma he has. In a short few minutes of conversation he has turned Chris from cold and unwelcoming ââ¬ËChris: Thirteen months. ââ¬â¢ To one who is warm and laughing and allows Gerry to ââ¬Ëdance her lightly, elegantly across the garden. ââ¬â¢ The audience views this exchange with surprise having heard only very negative things about Gerry from the sisters; the easy acceptance from Chris confuses them. The audienceââ¬â¢s mistrust of Gerryââ¬â¢s character increases after the small discussion of Agnes between the two. Having already seen Agnesââ¬â¢s rigid, almost forced disinterest in Gerry, and then to have Gerry asking specifically after her Friel creates a slight unease for the audience, suggesting that something may have between the two of them. This leads to the audience beginning to see the cracks in the familyââ¬â¢s foundations with Gerry seemingly at the centre of this. Friel enforces this idea of him being a womaniser later in act 2 when he begins to flirt with Agnes ââ¬ËGerry: Dance with me Agnes.ââ¬â¢ and then kisses her forehead, all of this watched by Chris. The audience begins to really mistrust Gerry at this point as it is obvious that he is the cause of conflict between the family they have come to love. The audience is seeing men in a bad light which relates to the feelings at the time it was being performed when the term ââ¬Ëglass ceilingââ¬â¢ was coming into existence, women in the workplace being oppressed by men and now, in the play, them to being oppressed in relationships. There is the feeling that men can get away with any sort of misdemeanour by just walking away, leaving, whereas women i.à e. Chris, are always left with the result ââ¬â a baby. Gerryââ¬â¢s carrying on represents this stereotypical male so that when the audience discovers that Gerry in fact has ââ¬Ëa wife and three grown childrenââ¬â¢ it comes as no surprise. In conclusion, Friel presents Gerry and Chrisââ¬â¢s relationship as something parallel to that of a pre 1990ââ¬â¢s relationship. He wants to suggest to the audience that women no need longer depend on men by showing how much better off the Mundy sisters were before the arrival of Gerry and the conflict he brought within the family. Although the influences on Friel were all about the empowerment of women, he presents Gerry and Chrisââ¬â¢s relationship with Gerry as the dominant figure, putting the play in the context of its setting and to show how the male dominance was a cause of the family breaking down. Through his presentation of the relationship he is evoking the idea that there are more possibilities available to an empowered women rather than a dominated one.
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