Both the title and the design of
The Seagullare ironic. But those ironies can only be fully sensed when, as audience, we have experienced the kind of complex seeing that the play demands of us. The ruling spirit of the play is anti-idealist and anti-romantic. In particular, the pervasive tendency to idealise 'love', 'art' and 'vocation' is presented as an understandable, if destructive, aspect of human desire. Unfortunately, the latter way of putting it makes it sounds as if a moral is being squeezed out of the play, but, while the absurdity of human behaviour is brought home to the audience, there are no heroes or villains, and the urge to censor or blame is not of any immediate concern. The human carousel of unrequited lovers that we encounter in the first act – Medviedenko loves…
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Citation: Reid, John. "Chaika". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 20 June 2002 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=7669, accessed 22 November 2024.]