The Playboy of the Western World: A Carnivalesque Reading
Abstract
A carnivalesque reading of J. M. Synge’s The Playboy of the Western
World is presented. Mikhail Bakhtin defines carnivalesque as a literary style that
challenges authority and traditional social hierarchy through the use of humour and
chaos, and he compares the carnivalesque in literature to the carnivals of popular
culture. Several carnivalesque tropes apparent in The Playboy—inversion,
subversion, grotesque imagery and ambivalent laughter—are examined, and a
specific focus is placed on carnivalesque tropes in the language of the play and
carnivalesque aspects in the action. Bakhtin’s framework of the carnivalesque, with
both its life-affirming and death-embracing aspects and its notable focus on the
inversion of opposites, is utilised to provide a fruitful, and as yet little explored,
avenue to understanding Synge’s play. Such a carnivalesque framework positions
this Irish play within the time-honoured tradition of European grotesque humour and
provides a contrast to more traditional analyses.
Degree
Student essay
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Date
2014-02-06Author
Röine Doolan, Mary
Keywords
Synge
Irish Drama
carnivalesque
grotesque realism
tragicomedy
symbolism
Series/Report no.
SPL kandidatuppsats i engelska
SPL 2013-082
Language
eng