Quest for Self Identity in J.M. Synge’sThe Play boy of the Western Worldand Sean O’Casey’s Juno and the Paycock
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Department of English
Abstract
Thepresent dissertation titled “Quest for Self Identity in J. M. Synge’sThe
Playboyof the Western Worldand Sean O’Casey’sJuno and the Paycock” focus on
the playwrights’ deep concern to the falsity and meanness that lies in the embodime
of the myths designed by patriarchy for the males and females. By setting their play
in the Irish background and by dramatizing theminute nuances of human characters,
they have challenged the then theatrical trend of considering drama “an organ for the
expression of national consciousness” and staging only the legendary and heroic
stories. Thus, they have repudiated such myths and have mocked the social
convention, history and religious orthodox beliefs that wilt women’s identity to the
role of sweet blushing colleens, tolerant wives and sacrificing mothers. By presenti
the men’s and women’s lives as failure in the parody, they have voiced for the
destruction and elimination of the myths.
