Sunday, November 10, 2019
How does Miller initially present Rodolpho? Essay
Miller initially presents Rodolpho through the use of description, dialogue, stage directions, structure and punctuation. Miller uses these techniques to present Rodolpho as a transgressive, ââ¬Ëunsicilianââ¬â¢ feminine character. Miller initially presents Rodolpho as a transgressive character through the use of dialogue. Miller attempts to draw the audienceââ¬â¢s attention towards Rodolphoââ¬â¢s appearance when the character Catherine states; ââ¬Å"How come heââ¬â¢s so dark and youââ¬â¢re so lightâ⬠. Miller contrasts Rodolphoââ¬â¢s appearance with a traditional Sicilian man, Marco, suggesting that Rodolpho is ââ¬Ëan outsiderââ¬â¢ in Sicilian culture. Millerââ¬â¢s notion is emphasised when Catherine, again, childishly states; ââ¬Å"Heââ¬â¢s practically blond!â⬠, the repetitive physical description suggests Millerââ¬â¢s desire for to audience to be drawn to Rodolphoââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËUnsicilianââ¬â¢ characteristic, furthered even more by Catherineââ¬â¢s dramatic reaction to Rodolphoââ¬â¢s appearance, possibly indicating Rodolpho is the first blonde man she has seen, despite living in the overpopulated town of Red Hooke. Miller presents Rodolpho through the use of stage directions. Miller possibly compares Rodolphoââ¬â¢s feminine characteristic to Catherineââ¬â¢s when ââ¬Å"He [Rodolpho] helps B set out the coffee]â⬠, compared to ââ¬Å"[Catherine] continues ladling out the platesâ⬠. In a patriarchal society, this behaviour was frowned upon, much to Eddieââ¬â¢s dismay. Miller could be using this comparison as prolepsis to when Eddie shouts ââ¬Å"Heââ¬â¢s not rightâ⬠later on in the play, with the quote symbolising Rodolphoââ¬â¢s feminine character. Another stage direction associated with Rodolpho; ââ¬Å"(Smiling)â⬠suggests Miller is content with presenting Rodolpho as a feminine character, as Miller appears to present emotion with connotations of feminine behaviour, much like Rodolpho is consistently presented. Miller here utilises the technique of dramatic irony, the audience understands that Rodolphoââ¬â¢s feminine behaviour is frowned upon by Eddie, whilst Rodolpho himself is unaware, because of this tension builds up and one can argue that Rodolphoââ¬â¢s role in this play is to build tension. Whilst Rodolphoââ¬â¢s appearance differs from a traditional Sicilian man, Miller presents the initial impression that Rodolphoââ¬â¢s behaviour is indecorous; through the use of structure and stage directions. Rodolphoââ¬â¢s utterance length is consistently longer than Marcoââ¬â¢s, and even the patriarch Eddie. In contrast, Marco, an example of a true Sicilian man speaks short Mono-syllabic sentences. Not only does the logorrheic Rodolpho have a long utterance length, Miller often punctuates Rodolphoââ¬â¢s sentences with exclamation marks .This subtle use of punctuation highlights Rodolphoââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëemotionââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëpassionââ¬â¢, arguably a stereotypical Italian quality but when contrasted to the emotionless ââ¬Å"suspicious, quite-voicedâ⬠Marco, an example of transgressive behaviour. Miller confirms Rodolphoââ¬â¢s behaviour is indecorous in Sicilian culture when Eddies is ââ¬Å"coming to address Marco more and moreâ⬠, the patriarch of the house does not approve of Rodolphoââ¬â¢s behaviour but in comparison accepts the directly contrasting character, Marco. To conclude, Rodolpho is initially presented as a transgressive character through the use of dialogue, description, structure, punctuation and finally stage directions. Miller possibly choses to contrast Rodolpho with Marco to highlight the differences between American and Sicilian culture, Rodolphoââ¬â¢s behaviours maybe perceived as wrong in Sicilian culture but acceptable in an American society. On the other hand, Miller maybe equally trying to educate the, mainly American, audience about Sicilian culture. I think that the use of description was especially effective at indicating to the audience that Rodolpho was ââ¬Ëthe outsiderââ¬â¢ and possibly the centre of any drama. I do not think that Millerââ¬â¢s use of punctuation and stage directions are effective for a modern day audience because in an ââ¬ËAmericanisedââ¬â¢ society, Rodolphoââ¬â¢s behaviour is acceptable whereas when the play was shown to its original audience, Millerââ¬â¢s use of stage directions would have been more effective. Overall, though, I think Miller has presented Miller initially as a transgressive character, and has done so very effectively.
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