РефератыИностранный языкDiDiscuss The Various Frustrations Experienced By The

Discuss The Various Frustrations Experienced By The

Characters In Chekhov?s ?The Seagull?. Essay, Research Paper


??????????? Chekhov?s


play ?The Seagull? is very much centred on the themes of relationships and


ambitions for self-fulfilment.? This


intriguing combination of themes gives rise to a selection of unusual


characters, intent on their own aims and ambitions.? It is this portrayal of an element of human character that makes


the play so interesting and captivating to read.? It is clear that the play focuses on the theme of unrequited love


and this is one of the reasons for the frustrations experienced by the


characters, however, perhaps more integral to the plot is the desire within the


characters for self-fulfilment, and it is perhaps more interesting to first


focus on this aspect of the play. ??????????? The dreams


of the characters seem to be almost entirely centred on bigger, better more


fulfilling lives.? They all seem to be


discontented with their position, whatever their current circumstances.? The endless search for a more fulfilling


existence seems to stem from an inner discontentment with the people that they


are.? They look for material fulfilment


because they think that it will make them happy, when and if the goal is


achieved, they find the discontentment still exists, and therefore they try to


fill the gap with more material or superficial things. One feels that a closer


examination of themselves and a greater degree of self-knowledge might give


rise to a degree of self-worth.? Inner-contentment


is what they seek and perhaps they would be better to realise that this comes


from a knowledge and acceptance of oneself, than to continue the endless search


for something that appears to be what they want, and ends up being unattainable


goal. Unless they are fulfilled within themselves, no amount of superficial


status will change their dissatisfaction.?


What they are not all ready they will never be. ??????????? This is


shown particularly well in the character of Nina, her one ambition in life is


for fame, as she believes this will bring her contentment and


self-fulfilment.? (?I?d willingly put


up with poverty, disappointment ?I?d suffer terribly, I?d be so dissatisfied


with myself, so aware of my own shortcomings but in return I?d demand fame.?)


Her ambition for fame is so overwhelming that she gives up her family, and


security in order to pursue her dream of being a famous actress like


Arkadina.? Her desire for


self-fulfilment, and genuine belief that when famous she will feel contented


leads her to flee to Moscow to become an actress.? Her dreams quickly become harsh realities and she is left


pregnant after a failed love affair with Trigorin, and desolate after her


career as an actress instead of being the glorious success she had hoped for,


turns out to be a dismal failure due to her own lack of ability as an


actress.? In her pursuit of her dream of


happiness through the means of love and fame she has been faced with the cold


fact that perfect dreams are shattered by cruel reality.? She returns at the end of the play as a


broken shadow, the symbolism of her phrase ?I?m a seagull? is evident to


all.? She is drawing a direct analogy


between the seagull Kostya shot and herself, both are broken creatures once


proud.? In her search for


self-fulfilment she has found nothing but pain and reality.? She has discovered that unless one is


satisfied within oneself then one will never be contented. ??????????? Similarly


with Arkadina, she has achieved what Nina has failed to achieve and become a


famous actress, but she is perhaps the unhappiest of all the characters. Her


fame has not brought her the self-fulfilment she expected.? Instead, it is distanced her from those


around her and made her all the more unhappy.?


Furthermore, her beauty is now fading with age and her son Kostya is a


constant reminder to her that her best years are behind her.? It is clear that she harbours some regret


that she did not make better use of the years when she was in her prime as she


refuses to talk about the past with Kostya.?


(Kostya: I remember?when you were still acting in the State


theatres?there was a fight in our yard, and one of the tenants, a washerwoman


got badly beaten.? D?you remember?? Arkadina: No) Her acting career, fame and fortune has not brought her the


joy or fulfilment that she expected it would, consequently what is left behind


is a bitter woman full of regret and deeply unhappy, who finds it impossible to


find any consolation in her son because of his constantly reminding her of her


wasted years. Her search for self-fulfilment has been utterly fruitless as she


has found that despite the fame, she is still the same imperfect person that


she was dissatisfied with in the first place, only much older.? ??????????? Perhaps the


best example of a character feeling discontented and unfulfilled is Sorin who


feels that he has wasted his life. He appears to be perhaps the bitterest


character.? He feels unfulfilled because


he feels he has not made good use of his time, but I would expect that again


this stems from an inner-discontentment with his life and himself. (Well,


it?s alright for you.? You?ve lived life


to the full, but what about me? I?ve worked in justice for twenty-eight


years?that?s why I enjoy a sherry at dinner and smoke cigars and all that.)? His drinking and smoking habits seem to stem


from his discontentment, he drinks and smokes to remove the regrets and forget


his worries for a time. His dreams of self-fulfilment are thwarted because in


his opinion he has wasted many years of his life, but in reality, he is


probably not content with what he is or has been within himself. Trigorin again presents us with a


character to whom fame, as a writer has brought nothing but more pain.? With Trigorin, his inner-discontentment is


expressed in his writing.? He is forever


striving to write the perfect piece, an impossible target for which he


tirelessly aims.? His pain and


disappointment after each failed attempt is due to his belief that he will be


fulfilled when he finally writes his tour de force. Once more his dreams


shall never be fulfilled, as he will never be able to write something that


satisfies his own ambition.? Therefore,


his dreams of self-fulfilment will always be thwarted, and he is doomed to be


unhappy. (?I feel a

s if I?m devouring my own life: in order to deliver honey


to someone out there somewhere.?) ??????????? Chekhov?s


characters are extremely difficult to analyse in depth and their motivations


for actions are more difficult to understand in comparison to other writers


that I have studied.? This is partly to


do with the fact that the characters appear in a play and there is therefore no


authorial voice telling us information about how the characters are thinking


and feeling.? However, I feel that there


is more to it than this. The play is very much concerned with relationships


between the characters; hence we learn little about many of the characters


except how they feel about other characters.?


The only obvious exceptions to this rule are Nina, Kostya, Arkadina and


Trigorin who we learn more about as the play goes on.? Therefore, it is difficult to analyse the motivation or feelings


of a character such as Sorin as we learn so little about him. ??????????? Chekhov


seems to effectively show through his characters how all dreams of


self-fulfilment through achievement or contentment seem to be shattered when faced


with reality.? This clear picture


conveys a very moral picture that self-fulfilment can only be achieved within


oneself by being happy with what you have, rather than endlessly looking for


what you have not. The lack of self-fulfilment through realisation of one?s


ambitions or the failure to achieve one?s ambitions forms part of the


frustrations felt by the characters in Chekhov?s play ?The Seagull.?? However, perhaps more important is the


frustration felt within relationships, due to unrequited love.? In some ways the ambition to love and be


loved within the book forms part of the desire for self-fulfilment as


particularly in the case of Kostya, he feels that he will find what he lacks


inwardly in his relationship with Nina. ??????????? Kostya has


a great need for love from some external source, as he feels rejected by his


mother. It is Nina that initially fills this void in his life.? However, even during his time with Nina at


the start of the novel, he is still deeply unhappy.? His problems stem from a want for parental love from his mother,


and he is very jealous of Trigorin and the love he receives from Arkadina. This


jealousy eventually develops into an inferiority complex as Nina also falls in


love with Trigorin and his own writings are always described as inferior to


Trigorin?s.? In this way Kostya?s life


is dependent upon others value of him, he needs to be loved and valued in the


same way that every human being does.?


His feeling of self-value and self-fulfilment is clearly affected by the


way he is treated by others. In this way, Chekhov shows us as readers that it


is not simply our own opinion of ourselves that matters, as a human being is we


are constantly devalued and put down by others, our own self-worth can be


affected.? This is shown in Kostya?s


attempts to get attention through his killing of the seagull, which acts as a


sort of premonition and an indication prior to his two suicide attempts.? The initial suicide attempt appears to be


simply to get attention, and after this fails and people refuse to notice or


care about the state into which he has degenerated, he feels the only thing to


do is to end his ?worthless? life.?


Kostya?s frustrations are very much due to the lack of care and


attention bestowed upon him by the other characters. He has a simple desire to


be loved. ??????????? Kostya?s


frustrations are not so much to do with his relationship with Nina, as to do


with the attention and care paid him by others, and in particular Arkadina and


Nina.? On the other hand characters such


as Polina, Masha, Medvedenko and even Nina all feel the pangs and frustrations


unrequited love during the course of the novel.? For Nina, her love for Trigorin appears to be to do with her


desire for self-fulfilment.? To be the


lover of a famous actor gives her a status that she craves, little does she


realise that status and position does not make one happy and her relationship


with Trigorin ends in heart-break, disgrace and torment which appears to have


driven her mad at the close of the play. ??????????? We learn little of Polina and Masha in


the play as characters.? We know that


Polina is the wife of Shamraev, who is the manager of the estate and that she


is in love with Dr. Dorn.? However, it


seems that in this frustration too there is a point to be made about


self-fulfilment.? It seems that part of


the attraction held by Dr. Dorn for Polina is the fact that he does not return


her affection.? The illusive target is


more attractive to Polina as he cannot be hers.? She convinces herself that it is only him that can make her happy


and fulfilled and therefore she strives towards a target that can never be


realised, as the target is not what she thinks it is. ??????????? Masha


similarly looks for self-fulfilment in a relationship with Kostya. I feel that


Masha?s love for Kostya is genuine, but it is also selfish, as it seems to me


that Masha feels she needs Kostya in order to feel self-value.? When he rejects her, she looks to drink for


consolation.? She needs to fill the void


of dissatisfaction and discontentment within herself, and when Kostya does not


provide what she feels to be the solution, she tries to blot out reality


through drink. ??????????? In


conclusion, it is clear that the characters in Chekhov?s ?The Seagull?


experience many frustrations due to broken dreams, harsh realities and


unsuccessful love affairs.? The key


theme to all of this failure is the lack of self-fulfilment felt by the


characters due to their dissatisfaction with themselves as people. This causes


them to search for fulfilment through other means, trying to feel fulfilled by


achievements or partners.? At the end of


the play it is clear to us as readers that the characters are no happier


whether they have achieved their objectives or otherwise, showing us that the


only answer to feeling self-fulfilment is to be content with what one is, rather


than constantly striving for something that is unattainable.? The characters dreams of self-fulfilment are


thwarted because the things they dream of do not lead to self-fulfilment.? This leads to more frustration and


dissatisfaction.


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