Wednesday, October 2, 2019
The Obvious is Absent in Mother Courage Essay -- Mother Courage Essays
The Obvious is Absent in Mother Courage     Ã     Brecht's intentions when writing  Mother Courage were to communicate his beliefs and make people aware of two  major issues facing society: war and capitalism. According to Brecht, people  deserve the wars they get if they subscribe to a political system that is unfair  and favors a specific sector of society, namely capitalism, in which it is up to  the individual to secure his own means of survival. In other words, if the  system is unjust in any way, war and conflict is inevitable. For this to be  understood, it would be essential that the audience see the play for what it is,  as opposed to becoming engaged in its story. This means that they would have to  be alienated from the play, and made perpetually aware of it as a play and  nothing more. To do this, Brecht jolted audiences out of their expectations and  deliberately avoided theatrical techniques that would make appearances  realistic. In this way, people were forced to confront the issues at hand and  decipher the meanings    behind what they were being shown.      The "obvious" being referred to by Brecht is what is clearly seen, what one  cannot miss. It does not require reflection and arouses no thought. By  alienating the audience in this play, they see that nothing is happening at an  obvious level, and can gain true understanding of the characters' reasons for  behaving as they do, and of the background against which they exist.      Brecht incorporated alienation techniques in the methods of staging used in  performances of Mother Courage, firstly by keeping a very bright white light  trained evenly upon the set throughout. This eliminated any opportunities for  creating an atmosphere; any magical or romantic views of ...              ...rinciples Brecht believed in: unless man has food and shelter, he does not have  freedom. This tenet is what Brecht asserts in Mother Courage, and whose  understanding can only be gained when audiences realise that the obvious is an  irrelevance, that this play should be seen not as a tale but as a presenting of  issues. By using the aspects of character, song, structure, style,  inevitability, and staging, Brecht ensures that the audience remains alienated,  and that their expectations are not met.      Ã       Works Cited and Consulted     Brecht, Bertolt. "Mother Courage and Her Children." Worthen 727-751.      Cook, Ellen Piel, ed. Women, Relationships, and Power. Virginia: American  Counseling Association, 1993.      Hwang, Henry David. "M. Butterfly." Worthen 1062-1084.      Worthen, W.B. ed. The Harcourt Brace Anthology of Drama. 3rd ed. Toronto:  Harcourt, 1993.                      
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