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Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll Play Analysis
State Theatre Company's production of Ray Lawler's Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is set in
1950s Carlton, Melbourne and follows the summer of Olive Leech (Elena Carapetis) who for the
sixteen years running has hosted Roo (Chris Pitman) and Barney (Rory Walker), two sugar cane
cutters from Queensland, for a summer filled with parties, drinking and lots of fun. However this
year is different Olive's best friend and Barneys 'girlfriend' Nancy has gone and got married while
the boys were away. Pearl Cunningham (Lizzy Falkland) has taken Nancy's job as the local barmaid
and Olive thinks shell be the perfect replacement. But this lay–off season is destined to be different.
Roo's gift of a doll for Olive may be the same but that's about it. Director ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
This creates four places of action or further into the story four places of conflict. It all stays true to
the original time period and helps transport the audience back to 1950s Australia. The main feature
of this set was the beautiful white but not completely opaque curtain which surrounded the stage.
When coupled with Nigel Leving's lighting design created wallpaper like effect to surround the
space which is later destroyed to connect with the climax of the play. Although it drew you into the
space in the beginning once characters started to enter and exit you notice that the curtain alludes to
a greater world beyond the living room. To signify the end of Act II and the beginning of Act III the
architraves of the room were lifted from 3 to 6 metres to create an empty area to help show that after
the fight between Barney and Roo all the characters felt isolated and created a stark reality of a
house with no life. The costuming also done by Runciman was a gentle connection to the original
time period but also had a seamlessly had a connection to each character and their personalities.
Olive was very much a free spirit and was very open with herself although naïve her very young
playful style dress and her lack of shoes connected with this so that we really understood her as a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Trial by Fire
[pic] Trial by Fire Did Texas execute an innocent man? by David Grann September 7, 2009 [pic]
Cameron Todd Willingham in his cell on death row, in 1994. He insisted upon his innocence in the
deaths of his children and refused an offer to plead guilty in return for a life sentence. Photograph by
Ken Light. Related Links Audio: Grann on the Texas execution that may change the death penalty
debate. Video: David Grann discusses the flaws of the Cameron Todd Willingham investigation. Ask
the Author: Live chat with Grann Wednesday, September 2 at 3 P.M. E.T. The fire moved quickly
through the house, a one–story wood–frame structure in a working–class neighborhood of
Corsicana, in northeast Texas. Flames ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
According to the medical examiner, they, too, died from smoke inhalation. News of the tragedy,
which took place on December 23, 1991, spread through Corsicana. A small city fifty–five miles
northeast of Waco, it had once been the center of Texas's first oil boom, but many of the wells had
since dried up, and more than a quarter of the city's twenty thousand inhabitants had fallen into
poverty. Several stores along the main street were shuttered, giving the place the feel of an
abandoned outpost. Willingham and his wife, who was twenty–two years old, had virtually no
money. Stacy worked in her brother's bar, called Some Other Place, and Willingham, an
unemployed auto mechanic, had been caring for the kids. The community took up a collection to
help the Willinghams pay for funeral arrangements. Fire investigators, meanwhile, tried to
determine the cause of the blaze. (Willingham gave authorities permission to search the house: "I
know we might not ever know all the answers, but I'd just like to know why my babies were taken
from me.") Douglas Fogg, who was then the assistant fire chief in Corsicana, conducted the initial
inspection. He was tall, with a crew cut, and his voice was raspy from years of inhaling smoke from
fires and cigarettes. He had grown up in Corsicana and, after graduating from high school, in 1963,
he had joined the Navy, serving as a medic in Vietnam, where he was wounded on four occasions.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Importance Of Australian Identity In The Play 'Summer Of...
Good morning everyone. I am extremely privileged today to be permitted the opportunity to address
the Archaeological Institute for the Preservation of Cultural Heritage concerning the time capsule
discovered and the significance of the articles to our culture. The paraphernalia contained within the
time capsule included the play 'Summer of the Seventeenth Doll', by Ray Lawler, which can be used
to demonstrate aspects of the Australian identity which are unique to this country and are ultimately
timeless. The play follows the lives of various Australian figures, including Northern Queensland
cane cutters and Carlton barmaids, during the lay–off season as well as the many aspects of conflict
that occur. The Australian identity presented by this play is reinforced through a second article
found within the time capsule, a review of the play, 'A Clear–eyed Revival for the 21st century',
written by John McCallum. The play has 'new things to say to each generation' about the Australian
character and it's because of this reason that the play resonated with audiences then and now.
Through these artefacts, three primary aspects of the Australian identity have been developed;
masculinity, mateship, and Australian colloquialism. These characteristics form the basis of the
Australian identity, demonstrating its immutability and exhibiting the rituals and values for which
Australia is known for.
The metaphor of masculinity is one of the main attributes of Australian identity integrated
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Analysis Of Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll
Summer of the Seventeenth Doll
Through the development of characterisation, Lawler's text acts as a mirror for an emerging society.
Whilst the play encompasses many significant themes relevant to an Australian 1950's society, the
disillusionment of growing old is a concept which is addressed through characters Roo and Olive,
who evidently find their discoveries both confronting and provocative. Lawler demonstrates
reluctance to grow old through Roo, Olive's love interest who has been consistently travelling to
Melbourne for the lay–off season every 5 months with his friend, Barney. Roo a dominant,
masculine cane cutter who after seventeen years is reluctant to address that he has aged
significantly, is adamant to believe that he still possesses the same strength and endurance that he
once did. It appears that he is blinded by the excitement of the lay–off season to accept that
seventeen years later, he is not the same person that he once was. Roo's disillusion is notable in Act
3 Scene 1 when he demonstrates a defensive tone when responding "Nobody tells me I'm old. I'm as
good as a man now than I ever was", when confronted by Emma. Through Roo's distinctive voice,
Roo's reluctance to accept that he has aged is significant in understanding Roo's response to his
unwanted discovery.
Similarly, Lawler's character Olive mirrors an identical disillusion to her lover. As Olive is evident
in her distaste towards marriage and her determination to maintain the lay–off, her
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Disney’s Pocahontas: Selling Lies as the Truth Essay
"Instead of progress in depicting Native Americans, this film takes a step backwards – a very
dangerous step because it is so carefully glossed as 'authentic' and 'respectful.' " – Jacquelyn
Kilpatrick
[1] Disney's first attempt to relay the Pocahontas story was filled with blatant falsities. The
producers, who claimed to eradicate politically incorrect statements found in past films with the
highly anticipated 1995 Pocahontas, found themselves at the center of criticisms from many vocal
activist groups. Feminists, Native Americans, and religiously based Christian groups found the
movie to completely overlook the true essence and spirit of the Powhatan Indian princess. In an
attempt to curb many of its criticisms and appease ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This depiction of Pocahontas immediately causes the audience to view her as a fairytale character
rather than a historically prominent figure. Feminists argue that if the story were about a fictional
heroine as found in all previous Disney films, there would be less concern. However, Pocahontas
was a "real woman who lived during a pivotal time of first contact" (Kilpatrick 2). The movie
encourages children to perform similar "Wonder–woman"–like feats, rather than being a strong and
realistic woman in today's world (Rosenzweig).
[3] One of the most significant discrepancies in the movie for the feminists was the Barbie–like
figure given to Pocahontas. Not only is her chest size capable of toppling her over, but the
remainder of her physical dimensions are also completely impractical. The supervising animator of
the film, Glen Keane, worked hard hours in the studio envisioning "an animated beauty–formula for
a sexy, muscular model. The Pocahontas of the 90's makes Cinderella pale in comparison"
(Rosenzweig 1). Feminists argue that Pocahontas should have been depicted as she really appeared
in the seventeenth century. Since her death in 1617, a vast number of different images of her figure
have been created (see the "potpourri"). Yet Disney's representation is definitely the least accurate of
them all. Pocahontas certainly did not seductively slither across the Virginia forest in a tight
buckskin miniskirt, and a
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Examining the Work of Playwright Ray Lawler
Examining the work of Playwright Ray Lawler: Every once in awhile, an Australian playwright
comes out of the fabric of time to capture the life of modern Australia. The work of playwright Ray
Lawler includes three pivotal plays relevant to modern Australian society. These three plays are
Kid's Stakes, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, and Other Times. These plays exemplify something
that had not been done before. Namely, a description of Australian society in the 1950s as it was.
The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll was the first of the trilogy and the first to portray Australians
onstage in a realistic manner. For this reason this play will be discussed in detail below and will be
compared to the other two plays in Lawler's trilogy. It will be shown that Lawler's work was beyond
a doubt relevant in the 1950s and will continue to be relevant in future Australian performances. It is
best known for its honesty and accurate portrayal of human nature in Australia. The Summer of the
Seventeenth Doll opened to the public in Melbourne in 1955. Its reviews proclaimed, "this fine play
untransplantably Australian in all of its accents, gave Australian theatre goers the chance to feel as
American audiences must have felt when O'Neil first began to assert American vitality and
independence in drama, or the Irish must have felt when Synge gave them The Playboy of the
Western World." Through such reviews Australian drama was proven to have come of age. Until
then, Australian theatre
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Trial by Fire
[pic] Trial by Fire Did Texas execute an innocent man? by David Grann September 7, 2009 [pic]
Cameron Todd Willingham in his cell on death row, in 1994. He insisted upon his innocence in the
deaths of his children and refused an offer to plead guilty in return for a life sentence. Photograph by
Ken Light. Related Links Audio: Grann on the Texas execution that may change the death penalty
debate. Video: David Grann discusses the flaws of the Cameron Todd Willingham investigation. Ask
the Author: Live chat with Grann Wednesday, September 2 at 3 P.M. E.T. The fire moved quickly
through the house, a one–story wood–frame structure in a working–class neighborhood of
Corsicana, in northeast Texas. Flames spread along the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Upon opening the back door, Vasquez observed that there was just enough space to squeeze past the
refrigerator blocking the exit. The air smelled of burned rubber and melted wires; a damp ash
covered the ground, sticking to their boots. In the kitchen, Vasquez and Fogg discerned only smoke
and heat damage–a sign that the fire had not originated there–and so they pushed deeper into the
nine–hundred–and–seventy–five–square–foot building. A central corridor led past a utility room and
the master bedroom, then past a small living room, on the left, and the children's bedroom, on the
right, ending at the front door, which opened onto the porch. Vasquez tried to take in everything, a
process that he compared to entering one's mother–in–law's house for the first time: "I have the
same curiosity." In the utility room, he noticed on the wall pictures of skulls and what he later
described as an image of "the Grim Reaper." Then he turned into the master bedroom, where
Amber's body had been found. Most of the damage there was also from smoke and heat, suggesting
that the fire had started farther down the hallway, and he headed that way, stepping over debris and
ducking under insulation and wiring that hung down from the exposed ceiling. As he and Fogg
removed some of the clutter, they noticed deep charring along the base of the walls. Because gases
become buoyant when heated, flames ordinarily burn upward. But Vasquez and Fogg observed that
the fire had burned extremely low
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Australia 's Cultural And Social Change
Literatures are often impacted by the author's gender, thought, age, and view and these points may
appear on the stories, characters, settings, and words. Also, readers' these points might affect to their
understanding of a story. Therefore, maybe there are different interpretations, which are depended
on the readers, to one literature. A reader might find an idea from the novel's character's behaviours,
while other reader may find different idea thorough the whole story. This essay will discuss that
contemporary Australian literature contain some ideas of Australianness such as historical legacy of
connection to Europe, especially England and traditional Australian ideals. Firstly, this essay will
explain Australia's connection to Europe and Australia's change to cosmopolitan in Dead Europe.
Secondly, it will discuss between Ng's understanding, another interpretation to Dead Europe and
some facts. Thirdly, it will explain Australia's cultural and social change in Summer of the
Seventeenth Doll. Then, finally, it will discuss the understanding of Australia with comparing
another interpretation.
Lynda Ng views Christos Tsiolkas's novel, Dead Europe, as a story, which represents Australia by its
connection to Europe and globalisation and cosmopolitanism. In Ng's article, "Dead Europe and the
coming of age in Australian literature: globalisation, cosmopolitanism and perversity", she focused
on several points, which represent Australia. Firstly, Ng mentions whether it is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stereotypes Of Australian Bush Women During The 20th Century
The ideologies of the Australian bush man and bush women during the 19th to 20th century,
although, different, demonstrates many similarities when it comes to gender roles and stereotypes.
This is demonstrated through the written works of both Henry Lawson and Ray Lawler, who
demonstrate the realities of living in the 1890's and 1950's in Australia. The similarities and
differences will be demonstrated by examining and comparing both male and female stereotypes of
the typical bush man, while looking at women's loyalty to their men, male masculinity and female
femininity, and the roles that men and women play in Lawson and Lawler's written works during
this time.
The 1890's saw Henry Lawson's written works touch on the issues of male and female ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Lawler's representation of women during the 1950's is controversial to the female stereotypes of the
time. Lawler demonstrates the new divide between women wanting to work, being independent and
holding their own, compared to women who wanted to get married, settle down and be the typical
housewife. Lawler's portrayal of the 1950's saw women continue to work male dominated roles after
the war, during a time when the women's liberation movement was being formed and women had
more choices in life (Red Apple Education). Olive a bartender, happy to work a male dominated
role, had the married women look down their noses at her for her life choices, compared to Pearl
who although a bartender, wants to settle down and be a respectful wife and mother, like the other
women (Lawler 9
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Comparing and Contrasting Summer of the Seventeenth Doll...
Time really is the essence of the play. Time is life. But time changes things and this is what the
characters find they cannot cope with change. One wonderful and resonated text is relied on its
typical characters. When we look back into the history of texts, we easily find that there are many
timeless characters memorized by us. Summer of the Seventeenth Doll and On Our Selection are
two classical examples indicating the legend of characters, which are meaningful and functional to
the texts and bring them with readership.
Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is a lasting play as it can be transposed to be as relevant today as
when it was written. The play is about change and the inability for some to deal with it, the battle
between dream ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Time is catching up with Barney as well and he is no longer the epitome of male prowess that he
believed he once was. Underneath the smiling, joking façade he really is a fairly pathetic man who
doesn't truly understand what is happening to him. Nancy, who the audience never actually meets,
was the only one who saw that change was occurring and wanted to get out of the illusion that they
were living in before it totally crumbled away. She embraced the change that was happening and
Olive mistakes this for treachery. The downfall of the characters, especially Olive, really is rather
tragic. In the final scene Roo accepts that change – as much as he does not want it – must happen,
he asks Olive to marry him. Her dreams are now shattered and she sees Roo as the one who has
taken them from her; "I want what I had before. You give it back to me – give me back what you've
taken." Change is inevitable and a person has to learn that the same pattern of living cannot serve
them feasibly forever. The corruption of dreams presented by Olive clearly provides the well–
known link between dreams and reality. Olive shows the audience how dreams can sustain, but also
prevent from growing up and maturing.
The theme of mateship is also explored fluently in the play, which contributes a big stage for each
character for fully expended. We see the loyalties that each character
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Getting Of Wisdom, Coonardoo And Summer Of The...
The characters in these three literary text, The Getting of Wisdom, Coonardoo and Summer of the
Seventeenth Doll, all demonstrate the traditions of gender roles in the early twentieth century. The
first text by Henry Richardson, The Getting of Wisdom in 1910, a Bildungsroman story of a
protagonist, Laura, as she develops to gain wisdom through her boarding school life. Richardson's
work undercovers what it is to be a "proper" woman in the early twentieth century through Laura.
The traditions of women sexualities in the early 1900s were set quite strictly as genders were set to
play a certain role in order to become a 'fully–grown' adult. The Getting of Wisdom describes the
progression or the failure of Laura to become a "proper" woman throughout the narrative. The next
literary text, Coonardoo, is a literary novel written by Katharine Susannah Prichard in the 1920s
about the romantic life between an Aboriginal woman and a white man. Although her work struck
many issues about interracial relationships as Corbould mentioned that Coonardoo uses 'bold and
unconventional elements' in the narrative, (415) it reveals many sexual identity of the Aboriginals
and the Australian whites, through the narrative voice of a minority. Summer of the Seventeenth
Doll by Ray Lawler is an Australian play and was originally set in the mid twentieth century. This
last literary text uses its characters to demonstrate their struggle with their identity and Olive's
failure to conform to the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Britain and American Influence on Australian Pop Culture...
The Influence of American and British Popular Culture on Australia in the 1950s
In the 1950s America and Britain influenced Australia's popular culture in a number of ways.
Although Australia's national identity is evident in every part of popular culture, America and
Britain both had a significant impact on the development of Australian culture since World War
Two. Throughout out the decade they changed the way people thought about Australian fashion,
music and entertainment. Fashion was based around celebrity images and American cinema and
television became a big hit.
In the 1950s, the fashion industry was based mostly around teenagers and young adults. Before this
time, adolescents were expected to follow in their parents' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Movies starring young men as the main character such as The Wild One and Rebel Without a Cause
inspired young men to follow punk style fashion trends. Wearing blue jeans, a white t–shirt, and a
leather jacket became popular around this time, and it was causing a generation of young men to
change their attitudes. This trend became "a symbol of teenage rebellion for boys everywhere."
However, not all boys were following this punk style of fashion. Many were leaning more towards
the British styles and trends, including the 'teddy boy' style, which consisted of high waisted, narrow
'drain pipe' trousers, long jackets, slim ties and large, shiny, pointed shoes.
(http://www.skwirk.com/p–c_s–14_u–189_t–506_c–1873/nsw/history/australia's–social–and–
cultural–history–in–the–post–war–period/social–and–cultural–features–of–the–1950s/fashion–in–
the–1950s)
By the 1950s it was becoming easier for more Australians to afford music products such as radios
and vinyl records. Before television was introduced in Australia, radio was evidently the most
popular form of entertainment. By 1955 and estimated 97% of Australian households owned a radio
set. In the 1950s radio announcers often used American accents to make their products seem
appealing and modern to young audiences. The vinyl record played a huge part of music in the
1950s because it was a new exciting and affordable way
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Distinctively Visual Learning and Teaching Program
ngTitle: Distinctively Visual | Concept: How are images we see and visualise in texts created? |
Language Modes: speaking, reading, writing, listening, viewing, ICT | Outcomes: | | | 1. A student
demonstrates understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context
shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 5. A
student analyses the effect of technology and medium on meaning. 6. A student engages with the
details of text in order to respond critically and personally. | Key Question: How do different
composers use imagery and images to provoke responses? | Texts: * Core Text: Maestro *
Additional: Wide Open Road * Beneath Clouds | | Key ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with
the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 1. A student demonstrates
understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning.
2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with
the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 1. A student demonstrates
understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning.
2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with
the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 5. A student analyses the effect of
technology and medium on meaning. 1. A student demonstrates understanding of how relationships
between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates
understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order
to respond critically and personally. 5. A student analyses the effect of technology and medium on
meaning. 1. A student demonstrates understanding of how relationships between composer,
responder, text and context shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the
relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order to respond critically
and personally. 5. A student
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17th Doll Stereotypes
This year marks the 60th anniversary since the premier show of "summer of the 17th Doll", and the
State theatre company's immersive and compelling illustration of typical suburban dystopia does not
disappoint. The exciting saga of the touch and go relationships between two working–class
barmaids and their cane–cutting lovers, who have come down south for the off–season, is met by an
equally charismatic cast that allows the director (Geordie Brookman) to fully explore the notion of
1950s stereotypes and the chaos that ensues when they are broken.
Set in 1950s Australia, Olive Leech (Elena Carapetis) and Pearl Cunningham (Lizzy Faulkand) are
two barmaids waiting for their friends Roo (Chris Pitman) and Barney (Rory Walker) to come down
from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Olive symbolically wipes the stage of every kewpie doll, removing any evidence of Roo or Barney.
Making the house completely plane and relatable for the audience. In a gallantry state of mind, Roo
attempts to right his wrongs and spontaneously proposes to Olive. But to the disappointment of
everyone in the audience Olive refuses in a fit of rage. As she would sooner give up everything she
loves then conform to the stereotypes of the fifties. Being torn between two states of mind, Olive is
left crying on the floor in the middle of Emma's (Jacqy Phillips) lounge room. Comforting Olive
allows Emma to step out from the background and console Olive with her empathetic wisdom that is
often overlooked throughout the play. Through life experience Emma has accepted what Olive
cannot, that there is no ideal world and that Olive must simply make the best with what she has. In
the final scene as Olive leaves for work, she seems resigned to the fact that her life is just as
ordinary as everybody else's, matching the rest of the play in projecting to the audience a
meaningful depiction of stereotypical 1950s Australia and the soul shrinking/ destructive/ impact
that a lust for individuality can
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Identity and Belonging
PROMPT– "Change can be easy or hard"
Throughout your life the process of ageing is constantly influencing your identity. As William
Shakespeare wrote "All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players; They have
their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts,...". Our identity is forever
changing and this is because we are forever ageing. Throughout out the three main stages of ageing
– youth, middle age, elderly– we don't just age physically, we age physiologically as well. Hence as
we age we mature, become wiser and more aware of the world around us. As of this our views
change from each stage of life, thus inflicting our identity to change. Although some people find this
transition from one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
However many adolescence' find it hard to transition to adulthood as they no longer have the
burdens of high school pressures and friends. This also creates problems for people who only have
social networks that they have from school meaning when school is over they need to adapt to a new
environment and become independent. This can be emotional and daunting for many youth.
Middle age is a crisis for many people both men and women. It is a time when they have left the
excitement and potential of their youth, instead they reflect back on where they have come from and
often look with dread towards their older years, in Ray Lawyers Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll
this period of time effects many characters negatively as they cannot accept they are aging and thus
see change as a daunting factor. Roo, the ganger of a team of cane cutters, realises he is ageing when
his back gives way and he is forced to step down as top dog. Since he was young he had been a cane
cutter, that was his identity but because of his ageing body, his identity will change as he can no
longer be a cane cutter, this not only affects Roo but also Olive. Olive has been in the group since it
started seventeen summers ago and is reflecting on her life so far, remembering the times when Roo
and Barney would come down South to see her and Nancy during the layoff. However since Nancy
has left the group to go get married, Olive realises that
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Themes Depicted in the Play "Summer of the Seventeenth...
"Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll" is a timeless play as it can be transposed to be as relevant today
as when it was written. The play is definitely a tragi–comedy but more than the ideas raised in the
statement the play is about change and the inability for some to deal with it, the battle between
dream and reality and loyalty and mateship. It also serves as a social document of Australia in the
1950s. Lawler uses symbols, the actions of the characters, the structure of the play and mise–en–
scene to effectively portray his feelings to the audience.
The main theme expressed in the play is change and the characters' inability to cope with this. Like
many working–class people from this time the characters in the play are fairly uneducated ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She embraced the change that was happening and Olive mistakes this for treachery. The downfall of
the characters (especially Olive) really is rather tragic. In the final scene Roo accepts that change –
as much as he does not want it – must happen, he asks Olive to marry him. Her dreams are now
shattered and she sees Roo as the one who has taken them from her; "I want what I had before. You
give it back to me – give me back what you've taken." (Pg. 93) Change is inevitable and a person
has to learn that the same pattern of living cannot serve them feasibly forever.
"Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll" a battle between dreams and reality. The characters are living in
a dream world where everything – for them – is perfect. This, of course, is until Pearl comes along
and sees through the thin façade of their existence; Glamorous nights!" (Pg. 57) she scoffs at their
seemingly pathetic excuse for a New Years' Eve party. She is the classic realist in the play, as is
Emma, and brings reality to the characters lives. These two also create an exceptional contrast and
help to magnify Olive's illusions. Olive's dream of living a carefree life forever is shattered when
she is brought down to a reality which she refuses to accept; the lay–off season is not what it once
was, and Roo is no longer the Aussie hero she thought him to be. His dream is to always be "top
dog" in the cane
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing Lawson's Short Stories: Lawson, Patterson And...
Question 1 – Settler literature of 19th century Australia often attempted to come to terms with a
climate and landscape that was alien and deeply unfamiliar. This writing produced what we today
refer to as 'the Australian Legend'. Discuss how the different 19th century authors that you have
studied in this course wrote about the bush and identity. Lawson, Patterson and Baynton view the
bush and identity through different lenses dependent upon their experiences and agendas. Lawson is
a realist with new unionism views aligned with those of The Sydney Bulletin the republican
periodical for whom he wrote (Lee 89). Lawson uses his short stories to draw attention to the divide
between social classes and shows the bush to be a harsh and isolated existence only suitable to men
of a certain disposition. In contrast to this is Patterson's romanticised view of life in the bush is
aimed at an emerging middle class and with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In Dead Europe the abjection and disgust escalate as the story unfolds and not all readers are able to
continue to read the book in its entirety. It opens with Issac setting very clear boundaries during his
encounter with the sex worker and the story ends with another encounter with a sex worker only this
time it appears all boundaries have disappeared as Issac murders and consumes the body. Both
Picnic at Hanging Rock and Lantana have more of a simmering undertone of abjection rather than
an escalation until the viewer can no longer stand it. Picnic at Hanging rock uses the sexualisation of
the young girls to disturb the viewer at it seems they are being offered to the rock. Lantana also uses
the landscape to unsettle the viewer however, it is more from the point of view that 'we' do not
belong here and the landscape will consume us and deliver the land back to the right
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Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll Essay
I have never thought so much about my future, until hitting eighteen in year twelve. The stress of
attending uni, studying, securing a job and the big one– getting married! Marriage, I'm sure, has
been something every teenage girl looks forward to. As for me, I have never been so skeptical of
such an exciting life event.
All it took was one google search for marital statistics to prove me wrong. According to a 2016
publication by the ABS, marriage rates have been on a high compared to the mid and late 1900's.
The very play that made me question the future of marriage was a pioneering play of the 1950's by
Ray Lawler, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll– a tale about unconventional relationships that don't
stand the test of time.
The play, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, journey's through a longstanding sixteen–year seasonal
love life of two Queensland cane cutters with two Melbourne barmaids during their five–month
summer layoff seasons. Through the character of Olive, one of the barmaids, Lawler ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Not only does this say a lot about Olive's immature nature, but sells herself as blinded by her own
desires to cover–up her romantic dream while rejecting the expectations that society places upon
women being housewives in marriage. During the 1950's, materialism, consumerism and other
economic affairs, were all part of a pivotal era for Australia. The pre–WWII and Great Depression
era saw through the freedom of women entering the labor workforce in the absence of men, but at
the start of the 1950's, women were pushed to return to their domestic role as housewives. Lawler
conveys through the character of Olive that women in that era wanted more freedom, they wanted to
be liberated from the roles that came with a lifelong commitment in marriage as well as the pressure
of living up to society's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examining the Work of Playwright Ray Lawler
Examining the work of Playwright Ray Lawler: Every once in awhile, an Australian playwright
comes out of the fabric of time to capture the life of modern Australia. The work of playwright Ray
Lawler includes three pivotal plays relevant to modern Australian society. These three plays are
Kid's Stakes, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, and Other Times. These plays exemplify something
that had not been done before. Namely, a description of Australian society in the 1950s as it was.
The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll was the first of the trilogy and the first to portray Australians
onstage in a realistic manner. For this reason this play will be discussed in detail below and will be
compared to the other two plays in Lawler's trilogy. It will be shown that Lawler's work was beyond
a doubt relevant in the 1950s and will continue to be relevant in future Australian performances. It is
best known for its honesty and accurate portrayal of human nature in Australia. The Summer of the
Seventeenth Doll opened to the public in Melbourne in 1955. Its reviews proclaimed, "this fine play
untransplantably Australian in all of its accents, gave Australian theatre goers the chance to feel as
American audiences must have felt when O'Neil first began to assert American vitality and
independence in drama, or the Irish must have felt when Synge gave them The Playboy of the
Western World." Through such reviews Australian drama was proven to have come of age. Until
then, Australian theatre
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Eveleen: A Narrative Fiction
Eveleen's earliest memory involved her head being forced into the sand as her tormentor pinned her
down with his own body. She could remember, clawing up nothing but those course golden grains
and those tiny pins embedding themselves beneath her nails, as she desperately sought her escape.
The feeling of inhaling of their saltiness as they coated her tongue and rattled down her throat,
burning her fragile lungs can still be felt when recalled. The harsh suffocating gasps as air, just
barely escaping her, follow, taking her breath away even nineteen years later. If it hadn't been for the
kind soul pulling her aggressor off of her, Eveleen doubted she would have ever survived the
incident.
Kenny Hawk's first full sentences had been comprised ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She was tossed into foster home after foster home, school after school, all throughout her middle
and high school years. Yet, it didn't matter. There was always more Chandlers, wherever Eveleen
went. But she never did find another Jack.
Eveleen was strong, though. While she never confronted her attackers, nor did she ever seek help,
she tried her best to hold her head up high. She never reacted, she never gave in. She refused to give
her attackers any satisfaction. To see her cry was to give them excess power. So she did. Not in
public, at least. Only the bathroom stalls every saw her tears. It was usually, not safe to cry at home.
More often than not, her bullies followed her there, waiting and lurking to take their shots while
they could. Eveleen never felt safe; not even in her own
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Distinctive Voices
Distinctive voices convey personalities and attitudes by relating to social norms and defining events
of their contemporary culture – they are a manifestation of various views and human experiences.
Ray Lawler's play summer of the seventeenth doll is a modern realist drama, which explores moral
standards and social aspects of the 1950s. Essentially, the reader is confronted with unique views
concerning the roles of Australian men and women in the 1950s and their responses to a changing
lifestyle. From a working class status, the characters within the play are faced with traditional
pressures and conventional gender positions that allows the reader to envision how certain
personalities and attitudes react to change. Similarly in Judith Wright's ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Ray Lawler's play, 'The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll' and the poem 'Eve to her Daughters' by
Judith Wright are both primarily concerned with one idea: change. Whilst Judith Wright uses her
poem as an instrument to insight this change, Ray Lawler uses his play as a critique of modern
Australia's resistance to it. Both use memorable voices associated with gender to make their
arguments because the stagnant philosophy which Australians lived by during the 1950s and 1960s
was inherently masculine in nature. In essence, both texts endeavour to change
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Multiculturalism of London: Perceptions of Five Authors
The Multiculturalism of London 1 Executive Summary A different history everywhere one looks at
is referred to the melting pot culture of London. One of the most multicultural cities of the world is
London. The multiculturalism has become the habit of London as the city has been going for so
long. Communities from everywhere in the world is found in London. The dream of many an expat
is to live in London. A variety and an enormous number of festivals are hosted by London. Millions
of visitors are attracted every year to its multicultural society and flair of the city. People are
attracted to London because of its history, its different lifestyles and numerous opportunities, its
spirit of entrepreneurialism and adventure and its diverse cultural life and metropolitan flair. People
from different ethnic origins and financial backgrounds make up the diverse society of London. The
eight million people currently living in London speak more than three hundred languages, which
make it up the most linguistically diverse city in the world. All across the society of London,
multiculturalism is writ large. One will certainly meet people of different religious faiths and races
in London. The popularity and accents of cockney is decreasing as London is becoming increasingly
multicultural. The Multicultural London English has become prominent and is sometimes referred to
as Jamaican. The fabric of the city is made up by more than two hundred and seventy nationalities.
This essay will
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll Play Analysis

  • 1. Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll Play Analysis State Theatre Company's production of Ray Lawler's Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is set in 1950s Carlton, Melbourne and follows the summer of Olive Leech (Elena Carapetis) who for the sixteen years running has hosted Roo (Chris Pitman) and Barney (Rory Walker), two sugar cane cutters from Queensland, for a summer filled with parties, drinking and lots of fun. However this year is different Olive's best friend and Barneys 'girlfriend' Nancy has gone and got married while the boys were away. Pearl Cunningham (Lizzy Falkland) has taken Nancy's job as the local barmaid and Olive thinks shell be the perfect replacement. But this lay–off season is destined to be different. Roo's gift of a doll for Olive may be the same but that's about it. Director ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This creates four places of action or further into the story four places of conflict. It all stays true to the original time period and helps transport the audience back to 1950s Australia. The main feature of this set was the beautiful white but not completely opaque curtain which surrounded the stage. When coupled with Nigel Leving's lighting design created wallpaper like effect to surround the space which is later destroyed to connect with the climax of the play. Although it drew you into the space in the beginning once characters started to enter and exit you notice that the curtain alludes to a greater world beyond the living room. To signify the end of Act II and the beginning of Act III the architraves of the room were lifted from 3 to 6 metres to create an empty area to help show that after the fight between Barney and Roo all the characters felt isolated and created a stark reality of a house with no life. The costuming also done by Runciman was a gentle connection to the original time period but also had a seamlessly had a connection to each character and their personalities. Olive was very much a free spirit and was very open with herself although naïve her very young playful style dress and her lack of shoes connected with this so that we really understood her as a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Trial by Fire [pic] Trial by Fire Did Texas execute an innocent man? by David Grann September 7, 2009 [pic] Cameron Todd Willingham in his cell on death row, in 1994. He insisted upon his innocence in the deaths of his children and refused an offer to plead guilty in return for a life sentence. Photograph by Ken Light. Related Links Audio: Grann on the Texas execution that may change the death penalty debate. Video: David Grann discusses the flaws of the Cameron Todd Willingham investigation. Ask the Author: Live chat with Grann Wednesday, September 2 at 3 P.M. E.T. The fire moved quickly through the house, a one–story wood–frame structure in a working–class neighborhood of Corsicana, in northeast Texas. Flames ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... According to the medical examiner, they, too, died from smoke inhalation. News of the tragedy, which took place on December 23, 1991, spread through Corsicana. A small city fifty–five miles northeast of Waco, it had once been the center of Texas's first oil boom, but many of the wells had since dried up, and more than a quarter of the city's twenty thousand inhabitants had fallen into poverty. Several stores along the main street were shuttered, giving the place the feel of an abandoned outpost. Willingham and his wife, who was twenty–two years old, had virtually no money. Stacy worked in her brother's bar, called Some Other Place, and Willingham, an unemployed auto mechanic, had been caring for the kids. The community took up a collection to help the Willinghams pay for funeral arrangements. Fire investigators, meanwhile, tried to determine the cause of the blaze. (Willingham gave authorities permission to search the house: "I know we might not ever know all the answers, but I'd just like to know why my babies were taken from me.") Douglas Fogg, who was then the assistant fire chief in Corsicana, conducted the initial inspection. He was tall, with a crew cut, and his voice was raspy from years of inhaling smoke from fires and cigarettes. He had grown up in Corsicana and, after graduating from high school, in 1963, he had joined the Navy, serving as a medic in Vietnam, where he was wounded on four occasions. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Importance Of Australian Identity In The Play 'Summer Of... Good morning everyone. I am extremely privileged today to be permitted the opportunity to address the Archaeological Institute for the Preservation of Cultural Heritage concerning the time capsule discovered and the significance of the articles to our culture. The paraphernalia contained within the time capsule included the play 'Summer of the Seventeenth Doll', by Ray Lawler, which can be used to demonstrate aspects of the Australian identity which are unique to this country and are ultimately timeless. The play follows the lives of various Australian figures, including Northern Queensland cane cutters and Carlton barmaids, during the lay–off season as well as the many aspects of conflict that occur. The Australian identity presented by this play is reinforced through a second article found within the time capsule, a review of the play, 'A Clear–eyed Revival for the 21st century', written by John McCallum. The play has 'new things to say to each generation' about the Australian character and it's because of this reason that the play resonated with audiences then and now. Through these artefacts, three primary aspects of the Australian identity have been developed; masculinity, mateship, and Australian colloquialism. These characteristics form the basis of the Australian identity, demonstrating its immutability and exhibiting the rituals and values for which Australia is known for. The metaphor of masculinity is one of the main attributes of Australian identity integrated ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Analysis Of Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll Summer of the Seventeenth Doll Through the development of characterisation, Lawler's text acts as a mirror for an emerging society. Whilst the play encompasses many significant themes relevant to an Australian 1950's society, the disillusionment of growing old is a concept which is addressed through characters Roo and Olive, who evidently find their discoveries both confronting and provocative. Lawler demonstrates reluctance to grow old through Roo, Olive's love interest who has been consistently travelling to Melbourne for the lay–off season every 5 months with his friend, Barney. Roo a dominant, masculine cane cutter who after seventeen years is reluctant to address that he has aged significantly, is adamant to believe that he still possesses the same strength and endurance that he once did. It appears that he is blinded by the excitement of the lay–off season to accept that seventeen years later, he is not the same person that he once was. Roo's disillusion is notable in Act 3 Scene 1 when he demonstrates a defensive tone when responding "Nobody tells me I'm old. I'm as good as a man now than I ever was", when confronted by Emma. Through Roo's distinctive voice, Roo's reluctance to accept that he has aged is significant in understanding Roo's response to his unwanted discovery. Similarly, Lawler's character Olive mirrors an identical disillusion to her lover. As Olive is evident in her distaste towards marriage and her determination to maintain the lay–off, her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Disney’s Pocahontas: Selling Lies as the Truth Essay "Instead of progress in depicting Native Americans, this film takes a step backwards – a very dangerous step because it is so carefully glossed as 'authentic' and 'respectful.' " – Jacquelyn Kilpatrick [1] Disney's first attempt to relay the Pocahontas story was filled with blatant falsities. The producers, who claimed to eradicate politically incorrect statements found in past films with the highly anticipated 1995 Pocahontas, found themselves at the center of criticisms from many vocal activist groups. Feminists, Native Americans, and religiously based Christian groups found the movie to completely overlook the true essence and spirit of the Powhatan Indian princess. In an attempt to curb many of its criticisms and appease ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This depiction of Pocahontas immediately causes the audience to view her as a fairytale character rather than a historically prominent figure. Feminists argue that if the story were about a fictional heroine as found in all previous Disney films, there would be less concern. However, Pocahontas was a "real woman who lived during a pivotal time of first contact" (Kilpatrick 2). The movie encourages children to perform similar "Wonder–woman"–like feats, rather than being a strong and realistic woman in today's world (Rosenzweig). [3] One of the most significant discrepancies in the movie for the feminists was the Barbie–like figure given to Pocahontas. Not only is her chest size capable of toppling her over, but the remainder of her physical dimensions are also completely impractical. The supervising animator of the film, Glen Keane, worked hard hours in the studio envisioning "an animated beauty–formula for a sexy, muscular model. The Pocahontas of the 90's makes Cinderella pale in comparison" (Rosenzweig 1). Feminists argue that Pocahontas should have been depicted as she really appeared in the seventeenth century. Since her death in 1617, a vast number of different images of her figure have been created (see the "potpourri"). Yet Disney's representation is definitely the least accurate of them all. Pocahontas certainly did not seductively slither across the Virginia forest in a tight buckskin miniskirt, and a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Examining the Work of Playwright Ray Lawler Examining the work of Playwright Ray Lawler: Every once in awhile, an Australian playwright comes out of the fabric of time to capture the life of modern Australia. The work of playwright Ray Lawler includes three pivotal plays relevant to modern Australian society. These three plays are Kid's Stakes, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, and Other Times. These plays exemplify something that had not been done before. Namely, a description of Australian society in the 1950s as it was. The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll was the first of the trilogy and the first to portray Australians onstage in a realistic manner. For this reason this play will be discussed in detail below and will be compared to the other two plays in Lawler's trilogy. It will be shown that Lawler's work was beyond a doubt relevant in the 1950s and will continue to be relevant in future Australian performances. It is best known for its honesty and accurate portrayal of human nature in Australia. The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll opened to the public in Melbourne in 1955. Its reviews proclaimed, "this fine play untransplantably Australian in all of its accents, gave Australian theatre goers the chance to feel as American audiences must have felt when O'Neil first began to assert American vitality and independence in drama, or the Irish must have felt when Synge gave them The Playboy of the Western World." Through such reviews Australian drama was proven to have come of age. Until then, Australian theatre ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Trial by Fire [pic] Trial by Fire Did Texas execute an innocent man? by David Grann September 7, 2009 [pic] Cameron Todd Willingham in his cell on death row, in 1994. He insisted upon his innocence in the deaths of his children and refused an offer to plead guilty in return for a life sentence. Photograph by Ken Light. Related Links Audio: Grann on the Texas execution that may change the death penalty debate. Video: David Grann discusses the flaws of the Cameron Todd Willingham investigation. Ask the Author: Live chat with Grann Wednesday, September 2 at 3 P.M. E.T. The fire moved quickly through the house, a one–story wood–frame structure in a working–class neighborhood of Corsicana, in northeast Texas. Flames spread along the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Upon opening the back door, Vasquez observed that there was just enough space to squeeze past the refrigerator blocking the exit. The air smelled of burned rubber and melted wires; a damp ash covered the ground, sticking to their boots. In the kitchen, Vasquez and Fogg discerned only smoke and heat damage–a sign that the fire had not originated there–and so they pushed deeper into the nine–hundred–and–seventy–five–square–foot building. A central corridor led past a utility room and the master bedroom, then past a small living room, on the left, and the children's bedroom, on the right, ending at the front door, which opened onto the porch. Vasquez tried to take in everything, a process that he compared to entering one's mother–in–law's house for the first time: "I have the same curiosity." In the utility room, he noticed on the wall pictures of skulls and what he later described as an image of "the Grim Reaper." Then he turned into the master bedroom, where Amber's body had been found. Most of the damage there was also from smoke and heat, suggesting that the fire had started farther down the hallway, and he headed that way, stepping over debris and ducking under insulation and wiring that hung down from the exposed ceiling. As he and Fogg removed some of the clutter, they noticed deep charring along the base of the walls. Because gases become buoyant when heated, flames ordinarily burn upward. But Vasquez and Fogg observed that the fire had burned extremely low ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Australia 's Cultural And Social Change Literatures are often impacted by the author's gender, thought, age, and view and these points may appear on the stories, characters, settings, and words. Also, readers' these points might affect to their understanding of a story. Therefore, maybe there are different interpretations, which are depended on the readers, to one literature. A reader might find an idea from the novel's character's behaviours, while other reader may find different idea thorough the whole story. This essay will discuss that contemporary Australian literature contain some ideas of Australianness such as historical legacy of connection to Europe, especially England and traditional Australian ideals. Firstly, this essay will explain Australia's connection to Europe and Australia's change to cosmopolitan in Dead Europe. Secondly, it will discuss between Ng's understanding, another interpretation to Dead Europe and some facts. Thirdly, it will explain Australia's cultural and social change in Summer of the Seventeenth Doll. Then, finally, it will discuss the understanding of Australia with comparing another interpretation. Lynda Ng views Christos Tsiolkas's novel, Dead Europe, as a story, which represents Australia by its connection to Europe and globalisation and cosmopolitanism. In Ng's article, "Dead Europe and the coming of age in Australian literature: globalisation, cosmopolitanism and perversity", she focused on several points, which represent Australia. Firstly, Ng mentions whether it is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Stereotypes Of Australian Bush Women During The 20th Century The ideologies of the Australian bush man and bush women during the 19th to 20th century, although, different, demonstrates many similarities when it comes to gender roles and stereotypes. This is demonstrated through the written works of both Henry Lawson and Ray Lawler, who demonstrate the realities of living in the 1890's and 1950's in Australia. The similarities and differences will be demonstrated by examining and comparing both male and female stereotypes of the typical bush man, while looking at women's loyalty to their men, male masculinity and female femininity, and the roles that men and women play in Lawson and Lawler's written works during this time. The 1890's saw Henry Lawson's written works touch on the issues of male and female ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Lawler's representation of women during the 1950's is controversial to the female stereotypes of the time. Lawler demonstrates the new divide between women wanting to work, being independent and holding their own, compared to women who wanted to get married, settle down and be the typical housewife. Lawler's portrayal of the 1950's saw women continue to work male dominated roles after the war, during a time when the women's liberation movement was being formed and women had more choices in life (Red Apple Education). Olive a bartender, happy to work a male dominated role, had the married women look down their noses at her for her life choices, compared to Pearl who although a bartender, wants to settle down and be a respectful wife and mother, like the other women (Lawler 9 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Comparing and Contrasting Summer of the Seventeenth Doll... Time really is the essence of the play. Time is life. But time changes things and this is what the characters find they cannot cope with change. One wonderful and resonated text is relied on its typical characters. When we look back into the history of texts, we easily find that there are many timeless characters memorized by us. Summer of the Seventeenth Doll and On Our Selection are two classical examples indicating the legend of characters, which are meaningful and functional to the texts and bring them with readership. Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is a lasting play as it can be transposed to be as relevant today as when it was written. The play is about change and the inability for some to deal with it, the battle between dream ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Time is catching up with Barney as well and he is no longer the epitome of male prowess that he believed he once was. Underneath the smiling, joking façade he really is a fairly pathetic man who doesn't truly understand what is happening to him. Nancy, who the audience never actually meets, was the only one who saw that change was occurring and wanted to get out of the illusion that they were living in before it totally crumbled away. She embraced the change that was happening and Olive mistakes this for treachery. The downfall of the characters, especially Olive, really is rather tragic. In the final scene Roo accepts that change – as much as he does not want it – must happen, he asks Olive to marry him. Her dreams are now shattered and she sees Roo as the one who has taken them from her; "I want what I had before. You give it back to me – give me back what you've taken." Change is inevitable and a person has to learn that the same pattern of living cannot serve them feasibly forever. The corruption of dreams presented by Olive clearly provides the well– known link between dreams and reality. Olive shows the audience how dreams can sustain, but also prevent from growing up and maturing. The theme of mateship is also explored fluently in the play, which contributes a big stage for each character for fully expended. We see the loyalties that each character ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. The Getting Of Wisdom, Coonardoo And Summer Of The... The characters in these three literary text, The Getting of Wisdom, Coonardoo and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, all demonstrate the traditions of gender roles in the early twentieth century. The first text by Henry Richardson, The Getting of Wisdom in 1910, a Bildungsroman story of a protagonist, Laura, as she develops to gain wisdom through her boarding school life. Richardson's work undercovers what it is to be a "proper" woman in the early twentieth century through Laura. The traditions of women sexualities in the early 1900s were set quite strictly as genders were set to play a certain role in order to become a 'fully–grown' adult. The Getting of Wisdom describes the progression or the failure of Laura to become a "proper" woman throughout the narrative. The next literary text, Coonardoo, is a literary novel written by Katharine Susannah Prichard in the 1920s about the romantic life between an Aboriginal woman and a white man. Although her work struck many issues about interracial relationships as Corbould mentioned that Coonardoo uses 'bold and unconventional elements' in the narrative, (415) it reveals many sexual identity of the Aboriginals and the Australian whites, through the narrative voice of a minority. Summer of the Seventeenth Doll by Ray Lawler is an Australian play and was originally set in the mid twentieth century. This last literary text uses its characters to demonstrate their struggle with their identity and Olive's failure to conform to the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Britain and American Influence on Australian Pop Culture... The Influence of American and British Popular Culture on Australia in the 1950s In the 1950s America and Britain influenced Australia's popular culture in a number of ways. Although Australia's national identity is evident in every part of popular culture, America and Britain both had a significant impact on the development of Australian culture since World War Two. Throughout out the decade they changed the way people thought about Australian fashion, music and entertainment. Fashion was based around celebrity images and American cinema and television became a big hit. In the 1950s, the fashion industry was based mostly around teenagers and young adults. Before this time, adolescents were expected to follow in their parents' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Movies starring young men as the main character such as The Wild One and Rebel Without a Cause inspired young men to follow punk style fashion trends. Wearing blue jeans, a white t–shirt, and a leather jacket became popular around this time, and it was causing a generation of young men to change their attitudes. This trend became "a symbol of teenage rebellion for boys everywhere." However, not all boys were following this punk style of fashion. Many were leaning more towards the British styles and trends, including the 'teddy boy' style, which consisted of high waisted, narrow 'drain pipe' trousers, long jackets, slim ties and large, shiny, pointed shoes. (http://www.skwirk.com/p–c_s–14_u–189_t–506_c–1873/nsw/history/australia's–social–and– cultural–history–in–the–post–war–period/social–and–cultural–features–of–the–1950s/fashion–in– the–1950s) By the 1950s it was becoming easier for more Australians to afford music products such as radios and vinyl records. Before television was introduced in Australia, radio was evidently the most popular form of entertainment. By 1955 and estimated 97% of Australian households owned a radio set. In the 1950s radio announcers often used American accents to make their products seem appealing and modern to young audiences. The vinyl record played a huge part of music in the 1950s because it was a new exciting and affordable way ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Distinctively Visual Learning and Teaching Program ngTitle: Distinctively Visual | Concept: How are images we see and visualise in texts created? | Language Modes: speaking, reading, writing, listening, viewing, ICT | Outcomes: | | | 1. A student demonstrates understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 5. A student analyses the effect of technology and medium on meaning. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. | Key Question: How do different composers use imagery and images to provoke responses? | Texts: * Core Text: Maestro * Additional: Wide Open Road * Beneath Clouds | | Key ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 1. A student demonstrates understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 1. A student demonstrates understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 5. A student analyses the effect of technology and medium on meaning. 1. A student demonstrates understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 5. A student analyses the effect of technology and medium on meaning. 1. A student demonstrates understanding of how relationships between composer, responder, text and context shape meaning. 2. A student demonstrates understanding of the relationships among texts. 6. A student engages with the details of text in order to respond critically and personally. 5. A student ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. 17th Doll Stereotypes This year marks the 60th anniversary since the premier show of "summer of the 17th Doll", and the State theatre company's immersive and compelling illustration of typical suburban dystopia does not disappoint. The exciting saga of the touch and go relationships between two working–class barmaids and their cane–cutting lovers, who have come down south for the off–season, is met by an equally charismatic cast that allows the director (Geordie Brookman) to fully explore the notion of 1950s stereotypes and the chaos that ensues when they are broken. Set in 1950s Australia, Olive Leech (Elena Carapetis) and Pearl Cunningham (Lizzy Faulkand) are two barmaids waiting for their friends Roo (Chris Pitman) and Barney (Rory Walker) to come down from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Olive symbolically wipes the stage of every kewpie doll, removing any evidence of Roo or Barney. Making the house completely plane and relatable for the audience. In a gallantry state of mind, Roo attempts to right his wrongs and spontaneously proposes to Olive. But to the disappointment of everyone in the audience Olive refuses in a fit of rage. As she would sooner give up everything she loves then conform to the stereotypes of the fifties. Being torn between two states of mind, Olive is left crying on the floor in the middle of Emma's (Jacqy Phillips) lounge room. Comforting Olive allows Emma to step out from the background and console Olive with her empathetic wisdom that is often overlooked throughout the play. Through life experience Emma has accepted what Olive cannot, that there is no ideal world and that Olive must simply make the best with what she has. In the final scene as Olive leaves for work, she seems resigned to the fact that her life is just as ordinary as everybody else's, matching the rest of the play in projecting to the audience a meaningful depiction of stereotypical 1950s Australia and the soul shrinking/ destructive/ impact that a lust for individuality can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Identity and Belonging PROMPT– "Change can be easy or hard" Throughout your life the process of ageing is constantly influencing your identity. As William Shakespeare wrote "All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts,...". Our identity is forever changing and this is because we are forever ageing. Throughout out the three main stages of ageing – youth, middle age, elderly– we don't just age physically, we age physiologically as well. Hence as we age we mature, become wiser and more aware of the world around us. As of this our views change from each stage of life, thus inflicting our identity to change. Although some people find this transition from one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However many adolescence' find it hard to transition to adulthood as they no longer have the burdens of high school pressures and friends. This also creates problems for people who only have social networks that they have from school meaning when school is over they need to adapt to a new environment and become independent. This can be emotional and daunting for many youth. Middle age is a crisis for many people both men and women. It is a time when they have left the excitement and potential of their youth, instead they reflect back on where they have come from and often look with dread towards their older years, in Ray Lawyers Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll this period of time effects many characters negatively as they cannot accept they are aging and thus see change as a daunting factor. Roo, the ganger of a team of cane cutters, realises he is ageing when his back gives way and he is forced to step down as top dog. Since he was young he had been a cane cutter, that was his identity but because of his ageing body, his identity will change as he can no longer be a cane cutter, this not only affects Roo but also Olive. Olive has been in the group since it started seventeen summers ago and is reflecting on her life so far, remembering the times when Roo and Barney would come down South to see her and Nancy during the layoff. However since Nancy has left the group to go get married, Olive realises that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Themes Depicted in the Play "Summer of the Seventeenth... "Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll" is a timeless play as it can be transposed to be as relevant today as when it was written. The play is definitely a tragi–comedy but more than the ideas raised in the statement the play is about change and the inability for some to deal with it, the battle between dream and reality and loyalty and mateship. It also serves as a social document of Australia in the 1950s. Lawler uses symbols, the actions of the characters, the structure of the play and mise–en– scene to effectively portray his feelings to the audience. The main theme expressed in the play is change and the characters' inability to cope with this. Like many working–class people from this time the characters in the play are fairly uneducated ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She embraced the change that was happening and Olive mistakes this for treachery. The downfall of the characters (especially Olive) really is rather tragic. In the final scene Roo accepts that change – as much as he does not want it – must happen, he asks Olive to marry him. Her dreams are now shattered and she sees Roo as the one who has taken them from her; "I want what I had before. You give it back to me – give me back what you've taken." (Pg. 93) Change is inevitable and a person has to learn that the same pattern of living cannot serve them feasibly forever. "Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll" a battle between dreams and reality. The characters are living in a dream world where everything – for them – is perfect. This, of course, is until Pearl comes along and sees through the thin façade of their existence; Glamorous nights!" (Pg. 57) she scoffs at their seemingly pathetic excuse for a New Years' Eve party. She is the classic realist in the play, as is Emma, and brings reality to the characters lives. These two also create an exceptional contrast and help to magnify Olive's illusions. Olive's dream of living a carefree life forever is shattered when she is brought down to a reality which she refuses to accept; the lay–off season is not what it once was, and Roo is no longer the Aussie hero she thought him to be. His dream is to always be "top dog" in the cane ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Comparing Lawson's Short Stories: Lawson, Patterson And... Question 1 – Settler literature of 19th century Australia often attempted to come to terms with a climate and landscape that was alien and deeply unfamiliar. This writing produced what we today refer to as 'the Australian Legend'. Discuss how the different 19th century authors that you have studied in this course wrote about the bush and identity. Lawson, Patterson and Baynton view the bush and identity through different lenses dependent upon their experiences and agendas. Lawson is a realist with new unionism views aligned with those of The Sydney Bulletin the republican periodical for whom he wrote (Lee 89). Lawson uses his short stories to draw attention to the divide between social classes and shows the bush to be a harsh and isolated existence only suitable to men of a certain disposition. In contrast to this is Patterson's romanticised view of life in the bush is aimed at an emerging middle class and with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Dead Europe the abjection and disgust escalate as the story unfolds and not all readers are able to continue to read the book in its entirety. It opens with Issac setting very clear boundaries during his encounter with the sex worker and the story ends with another encounter with a sex worker only this time it appears all boundaries have disappeared as Issac murders and consumes the body. Both Picnic at Hanging Rock and Lantana have more of a simmering undertone of abjection rather than an escalation until the viewer can no longer stand it. Picnic at Hanging rock uses the sexualisation of the young girls to disturb the viewer at it seems they are being offered to the rock. Lantana also uses the landscape to unsettle the viewer however, it is more from the point of view that 'we' do not belong here and the landscape will consume us and deliver the land back to the right ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll Essay I have never thought so much about my future, until hitting eighteen in year twelve. The stress of attending uni, studying, securing a job and the big one– getting married! Marriage, I'm sure, has been something every teenage girl looks forward to. As for me, I have never been so skeptical of such an exciting life event. All it took was one google search for marital statistics to prove me wrong. According to a 2016 publication by the ABS, marriage rates have been on a high compared to the mid and late 1900's. The very play that made me question the future of marriage was a pioneering play of the 1950's by Ray Lawler, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll– a tale about unconventional relationships that don't stand the test of time. The play, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, journey's through a longstanding sixteen–year seasonal love life of two Queensland cane cutters with two Melbourne barmaids during their five–month summer layoff seasons. Through the character of Olive, one of the barmaids, Lawler ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Not only does this say a lot about Olive's immature nature, but sells herself as blinded by her own desires to cover–up her romantic dream while rejecting the expectations that society places upon women being housewives in marriage. During the 1950's, materialism, consumerism and other economic affairs, were all part of a pivotal era for Australia. The pre–WWII and Great Depression era saw through the freedom of women entering the labor workforce in the absence of men, but at the start of the 1950's, women were pushed to return to their domestic role as housewives. Lawler conveys through the character of Olive that women in that era wanted more freedom, they wanted to be liberated from the roles that came with a lifelong commitment in marriage as well as the pressure of living up to society's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Examining the Work of Playwright Ray Lawler Examining the work of Playwright Ray Lawler: Every once in awhile, an Australian playwright comes out of the fabric of time to capture the life of modern Australia. The work of playwright Ray Lawler includes three pivotal plays relevant to modern Australian society. These three plays are Kid's Stakes, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, and Other Times. These plays exemplify something that had not been done before. Namely, a description of Australian society in the 1950s as it was. The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll was the first of the trilogy and the first to portray Australians onstage in a realistic manner. For this reason this play will be discussed in detail below and will be compared to the other two plays in Lawler's trilogy. It will be shown that Lawler's work was beyond a doubt relevant in the 1950s and will continue to be relevant in future Australian performances. It is best known for its honesty and accurate portrayal of human nature in Australia. The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll opened to the public in Melbourne in 1955. Its reviews proclaimed, "this fine play untransplantably Australian in all of its accents, gave Australian theatre goers the chance to feel as American audiences must have felt when O'Neil first began to assert American vitality and independence in drama, or the Irish must have felt when Synge gave them The Playboy of the Western World." Through such reviews Australian drama was proven to have come of age. Until then, Australian theatre ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Eveleen: A Narrative Fiction Eveleen's earliest memory involved her head being forced into the sand as her tormentor pinned her down with his own body. She could remember, clawing up nothing but those course golden grains and those tiny pins embedding themselves beneath her nails, as she desperately sought her escape. The feeling of inhaling of their saltiness as they coated her tongue and rattled down her throat, burning her fragile lungs can still be felt when recalled. The harsh suffocating gasps as air, just barely escaping her, follow, taking her breath away even nineteen years later. If it hadn't been for the kind soul pulling her aggressor off of her, Eveleen doubted she would have ever survived the incident. Kenny Hawk's first full sentences had been comprised ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She was tossed into foster home after foster home, school after school, all throughout her middle and high school years. Yet, it didn't matter. There was always more Chandlers, wherever Eveleen went. But she never did find another Jack. Eveleen was strong, though. While she never confronted her attackers, nor did she ever seek help, she tried her best to hold her head up high. She never reacted, she never gave in. She refused to give her attackers any satisfaction. To see her cry was to give them excess power. So she did. Not in public, at least. Only the bathroom stalls every saw her tears. It was usually, not safe to cry at home. More often than not, her bullies followed her there, waiting and lurking to take their shots while they could. Eveleen never felt safe; not even in her own ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Distinctive Voices Distinctive voices convey personalities and attitudes by relating to social norms and defining events of their contemporary culture – they are a manifestation of various views and human experiences. Ray Lawler's play summer of the seventeenth doll is a modern realist drama, which explores moral standards and social aspects of the 1950s. Essentially, the reader is confronted with unique views concerning the roles of Australian men and women in the 1950s and their responses to a changing lifestyle. From a working class status, the characters within the play are faced with traditional pressures and conventional gender positions that allows the reader to envision how certain personalities and attitudes react to change. Similarly in Judith Wright's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Ray Lawler's play, 'The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll' and the poem 'Eve to her Daughters' by Judith Wright are both primarily concerned with one idea: change. Whilst Judith Wright uses her poem as an instrument to insight this change, Ray Lawler uses his play as a critique of modern Australia's resistance to it. Both use memorable voices associated with gender to make their arguments because the stagnant philosophy which Australians lived by during the 1950s and 1960s was inherently masculine in nature. In essence, both texts endeavour to change ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. The Multiculturalism of London: Perceptions of Five Authors The Multiculturalism of London 1 Executive Summary A different history everywhere one looks at is referred to the melting pot culture of London. One of the most multicultural cities of the world is London. The multiculturalism has become the habit of London as the city has been going for so long. Communities from everywhere in the world is found in London. The dream of many an expat is to live in London. A variety and an enormous number of festivals are hosted by London. Millions of visitors are attracted every year to its multicultural society and flair of the city. People are attracted to London because of its history, its different lifestyles and numerous opportunities, its spirit of entrepreneurialism and adventure and its diverse cultural life and metropolitan flair. People from different ethnic origins and financial backgrounds make up the diverse society of London. The eight million people currently living in London speak more than three hundred languages, which make it up the most linguistically diverse city in the world. All across the society of London, multiculturalism is writ large. One will certainly meet people of different religious faiths and races in London. The popularity and accents of cockney is decreasing as London is becoming increasingly multicultural. The Multicultural London English has become prominent and is sometimes referred to as Jamaican. The fabric of the city is made up by more than two hundred and seventy nationalities. This essay will ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...