Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Blog Post #4 -- Endgame

From the onset of the play, it does not take the reader long to realize that Endgame by Samuel Beckett deviates from the structure of most plays. Most plays move towards a single defining action, the climax, and then experience some form of resolution. Endgame, however, is different. This play does not consist of the characters working towards a goal or a specific point, nor is there resolution upon the plays conclusion. In the end, it appears as if there was no point to the play at all, but rather four characters waiting to reach their “endgame.” Nevertheless, Beckett uses these elements to place emphasis on his point. He argues that often times we get caught up in the hustle and bustle of everyday life, fall into a routine, and fail to accomplish anything at all. When it gets to this point, all we can do is wait for death to complete our life’s events. With this in mind, I believe that Beckett was trying to teach readers today that although the final phase of our lives may be nothing more than a routine as we wait for our endgame, we need to live our lives in such a way that death does not serve as the defining moment, but rather highlights the many accomplishments that we have achieved.

            When reading the play, a reader quickly gains a sense that the characters are stuck in a monotonous routine. For Clov, Hamm, Nagg, and Nell, life does not have purpose anymore. And when you think of their situation, there is nothing really to live for. Hamm is confined to a wheel chair, Nagg and Nell do not have legs and are stuck in bins, and Clov has an unnamed physical disability. The joys in their lives come from sweets and telling the same stories over and over again. They simply perform the same monotonous routine and wait for the end to draw closer. Clov’s initial lines set the stage for the remainder of the events to come.

CLOV (fixed gaze, tonelessly)

Finished, it's finished, nearly finished, it must be nearly finished.

(Pause.)

Grain upon grain, one by one, suddenly there's a heap, a little heap, the impossible heap.

(Pause.)

I can't be punished any more.

When applying this quote to the context of the play as a whole, the character’s lives are devoid of meaning. They are stuck in the same cycle of events every day and until something breaks this cycle, otherwise known as death, their lives will not have meaning. Death will then define the lives of the characters. However, I believe that Beckett attempts to draw attention to this so that current readers will not fall into this cycle. Instead, they will give meaning to their lives in the present, so when the end draws near, death will not be the defining moment, but rather a series of events and accomplishments that occurred while the individual was still alive. No matter what way you look at it, death will be a defining moment because it represents an abrupt shift from one form to another. However, if one has lived their life in such a way that they accomplished many things, then death will not serve as the defining moment as it does for the characters, but rather highlight these achievements. When this is done, a reader will then escape the unpleasant fate of Hamm, Clov, Nagg, and Nell.

            After the conclusion of the play, a reader may wonder what was the point of reading it in the first place. Very little action occurs and there does not seem to be a lesson to be learned. However, when you take a step back and think about the monotonous routine of the characters and how they were not living for anything, you can see the point that Beckett was trying to make. Beckett uses the characters to show the reader what happens in the final phase of life when the characters did not accomplish anything, but rather got caught up in their routines. This leads one to speculate over whether they will look back and be satisfied with what they accomplished or will they see that they got caught up in the hustle and bustle of life, fell into a routine, and failed to accomplish anything at all. With this in mind, Beckett uses the play Endgame to urge present day readers to not get caught up in the same day-to-day routine and accomplish something remarkable. If an individual does this, then when the end does come, death will not be the only defining moment. 



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