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Look Back in Anger, by John Osborne

2023-09-19 22:13:05

One of the themes that John Osbourne has for the whole time "looking back on anger" is an unequal ideology in the social class. Osborne expressed these views on the social class through Jimmy's character - Jimmy is an enthusiastic, angry young man bragging the unfairness of the class struggle. Jimmy despised his entire wife Alison's past, and showed his greatest hatred for his course. Jimmy believes that class based rights are the foundation of all mistakes in the world, and his struggle is portrayed through his enthusiastic verbal rebellion against the deeply rooted principle of the present society.

On Thursday, 8th November, I went to a group of drama students and saw "Look Back in Anger" by John Osborne in Norden at Maidenhead. It was held at Norden Farm Arts Center. The theater is modern and has a spacious bar area upgraded to add a modern atmosphere to the theater lobby. The audience is sitting behind the booth, sideways or on the balcony. In the late 1950s late war the drama "Reviewing anger" began, British society slowly began reforms to adapt to the new situation.

John Osbourne's play "Looking back on anger" brings the concept of "crazy man crazy" to the surface. But what does this script teach us? Or, what does this drama teach us? At the end of the article, it is clear that this script teaches us something - the way people have their own way of thinking and reactions is very different from social norms I will. Of course, the role I want to analyze is Jimmy. There are three types of stimuli to respond to Jimmy's radical response. The first stimulus is love; Jimmy has a means of expressing love to women in his life different from the rest of society. The second stimulus is a natural attack against the threat, and most of these threats are small, and Jimmy is represented by Cliff, especially Alison's mother. The ultimate trigger of Jimmy's radical reaction is death.

In retrospect of John Osborne's anger, Jimmy Porter, a highly educated unemployed, opposed his work and life. He often criticized his wife, Alison, who thought it was arrogant. Due to Jimmy 's anger and frustration, Alison returned with his father, but reached a settlement at the end of the script. When young, Christopher Glowry was rejected by a young woman and soon got married to another young lady. His wife is cold and pessimistic, and the Nightmare Abbey is a name suitable for her family. Glowry is acquiring knowledge about his unhappy life food and drink. When his wife dies, he can comfort him easily by increasing the consumption of food and wine. She left my son Scythrop. Its dimness was enough to accommodate his father and the monastery of a nightmare. University education deprives Scythrop of his social virtue and he is rapidly becoming a country life like his father.