Beckett's identity at Rockaby Among his play "Rockaby" and many other works, Samuel Beckett will ask about human identity and how we interact with the surrounding world. The structure of the drama itself and the powerful minimalist image on the stage instantly driven the audience to the world of Beckett. An old lady who is referred to only as the only character "w" does not talk very much during the performance, mostly recorded women's voices, playing when rocking back and forth with a rocking chair.
The final result of Samuel Beckett, Clov asked, "What can I leave here?" Dialogue with "Ham replied." "In the script, Samuel Beckett dramatically showed the idea of relying on interdependence between the two focuses of each person, unless others meet their physical and psychological needs Beckett accomplished this through ham, and Ham assumed his relationship with the king's identity and Kloof's theme In Endgame, the idea is that dialogue and tone between ham and crof And was built through humor.
Samuel Becket's final game In the sun and laughter shelter, Samuel Beckett's terminator family has a hard time finding their own world niche. In terms of physical and emotional aspects, ham can let others surround him. Clov, the healthiest family in the body, also has the power that can not be defined late at Hamm. Ham's elderly parents, Nag and Nell have memory. Sometimes it seems weaker than others, but hum, crew, Nag and Nell have a source of power that leads to weak coexistence of family dynamics.
Samuel Beckett's "Endgame" is a complex political analysis that looks like a non-political and empty world. Because Hamm and Kloof lived under the influence of Marxism, they showed the features of bourgeoisie and proletariat respectively, but they only kept them so that they could be defined as something. This work implicitly defines - through the environment, and Hamm and Kloof as bourgeoisie and proletariat - the political base is just human rationalization, contrary to the pointless world, contrary to Beckett's existential nihilism Ideological information to point