Companionship is something people search for when looking for a soul mate, and in the drama play Soap Opera written by David Ives; desire for perfection turns into obsession. For instance, the writer open the imitation of a human being in a relationship with a hose hold appliance. Of course, the idea of a human relationship or infatuation with anything that is not human to be foolish, but people tend to become obsessed with material object every day. Comparatively, relationships are based on the ideal image of how someone or in this case something that cause an attraction between to partners. The direction of this drama play focus on the mist opportunity of the character the Repairman, in which his obsession for perfection in the Washing Machine …show more content…
The spoken words of a machine are crazy alone, but to hear the Repairman indulge in satisfaction from the words of the Washing Machine show the confusion on relationship goals. In almost every relationship, worldwide diversity makes for a better compatibility when agreeing to disagree is the norm. The Washing Machine is appealing to like of the Repairman, with flattering notions of perfection of a woman. The comparison of a perfect woman come from the comment of Washing Machine saying, “Maypoles don’t need to read the Good Booklet. / We know by nature how to run smoothly, noiselessly, and efficiently” (1.1.673). For this reason, the sweet words of a woman or woman figure are capture with the pleasantness of never having to worry on the capability of failure. Conversely, the machine is everything the Repairman wanted in a woman, but the Repairman is not a machine and does not have the capability to sub stain perfection being that humans are design to make …show more content…
In the case of the Repairman, this second encounter turns into a bashing of whose better whom. For example, Mabel still has an attraction for the Repairman causing her emotion to react to flirtation with him that turns into physical interaction. Now, the perfect machine is giving off a flaw of jealousy when Mabel assume the Repairman in interested in her. The Washing Machine use the Repairman to question Mabel general knowledge with, “Ask her if she knows the formula for calculating an algorithm. / Mabel, do you know the formula for calculating an algorithm? / No” (1.1.674). One assumption is the Repairman is so focus on perfection of knowledge from the machine, that he loose an opportunity to make up for wrong with Mabel. For instance, knowledge does not all ways make a person better than the next, but the Repairman lack the knowledge to know that insults is a sign of
Fairy tales tell us that once upon a time a girl met a boy; they fell in love, and lived happily ever after. Reality is not that simple. Long-term relationships force couples to become more acquainted with each other, include themselves in each others’ worlds and eventually develop further connections. However, a relationship can come to an end point and therefore one will try to come back in the other’s life. This type of relationship is remarked in Fran Kimmel’s short story “Laundry Day”. The author suggests that getting rid of unhealthy relationship leads to happiness, the author uses the protagonist’s transformation, contrasting characters and symbols.
In the documents, it is shown that the eight authors from different societies had an opinion towards the technology during their time. Some of the opinions were based on water and how there should be a system for it, the tools of the time period and how they improved, the people who wanted to see a change in their work environment and the people who didn’t want their work environment to change. The water based documents were focused on how the water systems should be run; for flood prevention or for aqueducts throughout the city of Rome. They provide intel on the environments at the time. The documents based on the tools and how they were improved through the different people manufacturing them. The documents set on how the working class wants
The theme of “The Darling” tells of a woman named Olenka that changes her interest every time she falls madly in love with a new man. This gives the reader the perception that she cannot form an opinion on her own. The behavior leaves Olenka distraught every time a man leaves her life. Olenka’s relationship between her first and second husband helps elucidate the theme. Olenka’s first husband Ivan Petrovich loved the theater which meant Olenka loved the theater. When Olenka married her second husband Vassitchka he did not enjoy the theater. His opinion became Olenka’s opinion. She then had the belief that she did not have time for the nonsense of theater.
Many people love romantic comedies. Some of these stories are based around misunderstandings, which add humor to the plot. This, of course is similar to Rostand’s play Cyrano De Bergerac, but Ibsen’s play, A Doll’s House, is centered around a relationship full of deceit. It has a pleasant facade, but when the viewer digs deeper into it, they find out the dark reality of the relationship of the main couple. Communication is vital to any relationship. A group of friends need to communicate openly in order to remain friends. The same thing applies to spouses. For the purpose of this essay, Cyrano and Roxane from Rostand’s Cyrano de Bergerac, and Nora and Torvald from Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” will be compared. The relationships of Nora and Torvald, and Roxane and Cyrano are different in many ways but they have one thing in common, a lack of communication. Thus, by this
Building on the notions of femininity and masculinity, the author outlines all the cliché qualities of men and women, supporting them with vivid imagery, while also being careful with his
. . the synthesis of the two levels depends on the marriage of the couple in the realm of the narrative occurring simultaneously with the success of the show in which they star. At a broader level the narrative resolution of every musical involves bringing together the forces of entertainment with forces opposed to entertainment. The synthesis achieved through the union of the romantic couple always involves a reconciliation of values associated on the one hand with rational cognitive thought or even Puritanism (the reality principle) and on the other hand, the world of the imagination, the world of freedom, impulse, spontaneity, values which underlie the pleasure principle and entertainment. (Feuer, 71) She further argues that one member of the couple typically represents reality and work, and the other member represents dreams and entertainment.
This obsession of retaining the standard of beauty also separates the women from their family. In Geraldine's case, the husband married her because of her pervasive cleanliness, and does not expect anything more. The relationship between the couple is very machinelike and without feeling.
Shakespearean comedies, like “The Taming of the Shrew”, “A Midsummer’s Night Dream” and “The Merchant of Venice”, typically end with a happy ending usually involving a marriage between a couple that was courting throughout the play. The ill-matched couples courting throughout the play often encounter obstacles and experience an uncanny style of courting. Shakespeare focuses on the hectic courting of the poorly matched individuals married at the end of the play rather than the future lives of these newlyweds is not given much thought in order to give the play a light ending. Rather than Shakespeare describing love as a natural human state, necessary for true happiness, Shakespeare’s plays are doubtful about marriage’s ability to provide
Love is a powerful emotion that every human being has experience at least once in their life. There are numerous connotations that refer to this emotion, but there is only one kind of love that can make a person change completely in unexpected ways. It is the kind of love that consumes the soul and everything within. Mixed with excitement, adventure, heartbreak, happiness and joy; it is a big ball of feelings, all concentrated in one simple, yet extremely complicated necessity to have, protect, please and give all of oneself to that one person. In certain occasions, love can grow very intense and, consequently,
“You talk as if a god had made the Machine," cried the other. "I believe that you pray to it when you are unhappy. Men made it do not forget that. Great men, but men. The Machine is much, but not everything.”
William Shakespeare’s play Much Ado about Nothing traverses the complex social, and emotional trials and triumphs of romantic relationships; Shakespeare’s perspective on the subject is both very similar to ours today, and different. Although filled with sexual innuendos, and humorous trickery and shenanigans, Much Ado about Nothing also dives into the complexities of social anxieties, defense mechanisms to cope with the social pressures, and the emotions involved.
The meaningful term “love” can be applied to differing relationships in Shakespeare’s tragedy Othello. In this essay let us examine under a microscope the “love” that we find throughout the play.
All characters in the novel are living in a man’s world; nevertheless, the author has tried to change this world by the help of her characters. She shows a myriad of opportunities and different paths of life that woman can take, and more importantly she does not show a perfect world, where women get everything they want, she shows a world where woman do make mistakes, but at the same time they are the ones that pay for these mistakes and correct them.
Her lack of response to the clerks advances along with her depiction as “hardly aware of her departed lover” (250) reveal how sex is not associated with love in her mind. Perhaps most importantly, the action shown in the phrase “smoothes her hair with automatic hand” (255) epitomizes this detached and passionless sexual encounter. With this automatic hand we know that this encounter is not anomalous, but routine--as everything in the typist’s life has become mechanized. The degrading effect of this mechanization is the loss of meaning in life which has extended from her job as a typist to her relationship with a lover. No thought is put into these actions, just as no thought is put into a meaningful connection between the two.