Saturday, 5 December 2020

Assignment 9 - Waiting for Godot: Absurdity and Existentialism

Hello Readers!

This assignment is a part of internal evaluation of student's academic activity in the Department of English, MK Bhavnagar University. Here is my assignment.

Name: Rohit Vyas
Class: Semester 3
Roll No. 19
PG Enrolment Number: 2069108420200041
E-mail: rohitvyas277@gmail.com
Course: M.A. English (2019-21)
Paper 9 - Modernist English Literature
Submitted to: Smt. S. B. Gardi Department of English MK Bhavnagar University, Bhavnagar, Gujarat, IN.

Assignment 9 – Waiting for Godot: Absurdity and Existentialism

Introduction

For over two centuries, existentialism has been a part of philosophy. It was believed that Jean Paul Sartre was the first existentialist but the truth is Soren Kierkegaard from the 18th century is the founding father of this discourse.

It is not the first time that something has been thought or said earlier and the thought is given a term or a word. When John Donne was writing poetry bringing the far-fetched images he was not knowing that his style of poetry would be coined as “metaphysical poetry” by Samuel Johnson.

Similarly, much later in the 19th century, Jean-Paul Sartre identified the thoughts of Soren Kierkegaard and coined the term “Existentialism”. There are many well-known thinkers who have given their thoughts and arguments on this philosophy. To name a few, Friedrich Nietzsche, Albert Camus, Herman Hesse, Simon De Beauvoir are the key existentialists.

Waiting for Godot is a remarkable play by Samuel Beckett which can be best fit in existentialism and absurdity. If the characters are to be seen, only one character among six is invisible. Which is Godot, a titular character who is the central part of the play. Godot is awaited throughout the play and the characters like Vladimir and Estragon are making various ways to meet Godot.

Can it be asserted that, Vladimirs and Estragons are found everywhere? The statement is agreeable in terms of existentialism. Implications of society, religion and power are carved in such a way that it becomes utmost difficult for human beings to be free from those conditionings.

Existentialism, an umbrella of several other terms, is a philosophical movement which raised three pertinent questions relating to the individual.

Who am I?
Where did I come from?
What is the purpose of my life?

These questions are inevitable and difficult to answer. If one thinks deeper into the matter, one may get to know that gender, identity, language, birth place, names, religion all these are given by others. There is no individual choice given to select any of these.

It is also almost impossible to answer the place from where did we come from. Besides, epistemological readings say that this question is theological and philosophical. Several religious discourse are there which try to answer this question. Karmic philosophy, the idea of mind and body, soul and consciousness and many more.

The third question is the most important other than the two. It creates the existential angst and anxiety. This play touches the core part of the purpose and the worthiness of waiting.

Vladimir and Estragon are two characters who wait for a titular character Godot. If we think of religions we can consider this character as God. But theologically it is believed that one can't meet God without leaving the material world. The dialogue which Estragon speaks at the very beginning of the play is,

"Estragon: Nothing to be done!"

This nothingness and emptiness is the modern anxiety of the human beings. The play questions the readers that, can we live alone? How one can find the solace and salvation from live. The very idea of meeting to 'param tatva', or divine power is being questioned in the play. If one looks through the lens of spirituality one can say that divinity and supremacy comes from within.

What do we mean by being spiritual?

Spirituality is not only practicing Yoga and doing mediation. Spirituality can be practiced though the daily routine. One just has to be skeptical and a good questioner to the self. Whichever work is being done on hand, it can be questioned through the lens of integrity and accountability.

How does the play work in our mind?

Indeed this play is a mirror to society. Vladimir and Estragon are the reflection of human nature. Vladimir is mindful and remembers many things, but Estragon forgets many things. He hardly remembers things. One is representing the mind and the other is representing the body. This ongoing conflict between mind and body is never to be solved through worldly things. One has to go beyond this material values and greedy mindset and practice spirituality to look into this matter.

Pozzo and Lucky are also a reflection of different types of social roles people play in life. Pozzo claims the land ownership and Lucky is the slave of Pozzo. One enjoys power position and the other is subjugated and subdued in the hierarchy of power. Even Pozzo tries to free him, Lucky still wants to be the slave of Pozzo.

For the sake of meeting Godot, Vladimir and Estragon do almost all the gimmicks which are done till today. But after a long wait, when a boy enters in the play, then a ray of hope arises. The boy claims to be the messenger of Godot and says conveys that Godot will come tomorrow.

This idea of tomorrow is also interesting to see. Whenever we speak ‘tomorrow’ it becomes today just the next day. In short, tomorrow never comes, and the wait prolongs for days to years to decades. The word tomorrow also refers to the set measures of time like, hours, days, months, years and so on. If one looks at the dynamics of existentialism with time, then one may question: Are we passing through time or time is passing from us?

As a human we are given very short span of time like 80 to 100 years. In such arena we have to work till death. Without the expectation of any result or reward one has to work. Godot can be seen as reward also.

The waiting creates absurdity in the play. The way Vladimir and Estragon feel, we all can relate the angst and agony with our own ways of waiting. Because in the play, Godot never comes and the play remains silent about it.

Thank You.

Beckett, Samuel. Waiting for Godot: Tragicomedy in 2 Acts. PDF, 1982.

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