Saturday, July 20, 2019
The Powerful Message of Becketts That Time :: That Time Essays
The Powerful Message of Beckett's That Time     Ã     Ã   Samuel Beckett's That  Time is a play that delves deep into the human psyche, exposing the audience to  the potential effect and consequence of one continually living in the past. Lack  of punctuation and fragmented repetition make the play rather challenging to  grasp yet effectively mirrors the purpose that Beckett has intended in this  work. In That Time Beckett dramatically illustrates several common downfalls to  human nature, which ultimately act as plagues against the mind, such as the  avoidance of the present in the continual analysis and obsession of the past,  and the uncomforting effect of silence. Through the use of  stream-of-consciousness and three alternating voices which flow almost entirely  without a break, Beckett truly taps into the core of human consciousness and one  of man's most extreme fears, the fear of the void, of nothingness, of never  being able to recreate "that time" again.      Ã       As is common to Beckett's work, the stage setting for this play relies very  little upon flashy backdrops and a multitude of characters, and more so upon the  mood that the scene creates. He presents only the bare necessity, achieving a  scene that is able to expose stark honesty.      Ã       Curtains. Stage in darkness. Fade up to listener's face about ten feet above  stage level midstage off center. Old white face, long flaring white hair as if  seen from above outspread. Voices A B C are his own coming to him from both  sides and above. They modulate back and forth without any break in general flow  except when silence indicated (Collected Shorter Plays 228)      Ã       The simplicity of the scene places all of the emphasis upon the voices and  those rare moments in which there is silence, thus, pulling the audience  directly into the mind of the bodiless head. Beckett has utilized this technique  in several of his other plays, such as Krapp's Last Tape in which the setting is  merely "a small table, the two drawers of which open towards the audience.  Sitting at the table, i.e. across from the drawers, a wearish old man" (55).  This effect is also present in Eh Joe, a television play by Beckett in which  "Joe's opening movements followed by cameras at constant remove, Joe full length  in frame throughout" (Casando and Other Short Dramatic Pieces 35).  					    
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