Tiyatronun gozde bir sanat dah oldugu donemde oyun yazmaya ba§-layan Bond, 1934 y1lmda i§t;i sm1f1 bir ailenin r;ocugu olarak Londra yakmlannda Holloway' de diinyaya gelir. lkinci Diinya Sava§Int daha r;ok kiit;iik ya§ta kar§ilayan yazar, sava§m neden oldugu deh§eti, korkuyu ve y1- kim1 derinden ya§am1§, Nazi saldmlan nedeniyle iki kez dogdugu yerden aynlmak zorunda kalm1§tlr. Bond, Nazi Almanya'smm ve sava§m neden oldugu korku ve §iddeti belleginden bir tiirlti 91kanp atamam1§tlr. Sava§m sona ermesiyle yeniden Londra'ya donen yazar, egitimine kald1g1 yerden devam eder.
Assist. Prof. Dr. Şevki Kömür: Narrow Road to the Deep North: A Different Perspective to Violence by Bond.
Edward Bond was born in 1934 and grown up through the Depression and War against Hitler. His career began at the Royal Court and he went on to write for both left-wing fringe companies and the National Theatre in the 1970s. Bond became increasingly radical and didactic as his popularity
grew in the contemporary British theatre. He writes many plays, analysing causes of contemporary violence and showing its psychological effects. In a sense all Bond's plays are concerned with violence that shapes and obsesses our society. In his plays violence is shown as an instrument and symptom of an unjust society. In Narrow Road to the Deep North, Bond deals with the mechanics of oppression along with the oppressors. The action in the play is distanced as an unhistorical table of an alien country far away from England. A baby is left to a river bank by his poor family, and Basho, who is an idealist, does not help the baby and goes on his quest for Englightenment. The baby who is left to death survives to revenge himself on society, seizing power. Basho, on his way back home from his journey to the Deep North learns that Shogo, the baby he left on the river bank, became a tyrant. He brings in colonial overlords, Commodore and his missionary sister to overthrow Shogo. In this play Bond uses religion and armed force as caricatures of the nineteenth-century imperialism with a British admiral and his missionary sister, Georgina. Bond also depicts the figure of a poet who uses the ab~tract ideals of art to reach his goals and becomes responsible for atrocities in the society. Once again Bond tries to show us what will happen when the power is left to the wrong hands like Shogo, Basho and the others in the play.
Primary Language | Turkish |
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Subjects | Creative Arts and Writing |
Journal Section | Makaleler |
Authors | |
Publication Date | August 16, 2014 |
Submission Date | August 16, 2014 |
Published in Issue | Year 2003 Issue: 15 |