1 / 17

“Master Harold”…and the boys

“Master Harold”…and the boys. Background Information. Athol Harold Fugard. Mother was an Afrikaner who ran the family business. Father frequently ill and permanently handicapped. Uses his own life experiences as fodder for his plays.

Download Presentation

“Master Harold”…and the boys

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “Master Harold”…and the boys Background Information

  2. Athol Harold Fugard • Mother was an Afrikaner who ran the family business. Father frequently ill and permanently handicapped. • Uses his own life experiences as fodder for his plays. • Committed to producing socially conscious work and exposing injustices.

  3. Setting Rainy afternoon, Willie, Sam and Hally conversing In a café managed by Hally’s mother Port Elizabeth, South Africa Circa 1950’s

  4. Apartheid 1948-1994 • In Afrikaans, means “separate-ness” • A system of laws put in place by the white minority government in South Africa.

  5. Enforced discrimination and segregation of the black majority, denying them their basic civil and legal rights. (marriage, jobs, “passbooks”) Created a culture in which hatred, alienation and xenophobia saturated every level of human existence (schools included).

  6. Shacks in Soweto South Africa

  7. Parliament HouseCape Town,South Africa

  8. Invictus movie clip Nelson Mandela • 1962- arrested for anti-apartheid activities, given life sentence. • 1990- released at age 71, 27 years later • 1994-1999- President of South Africa • First South African president to be elected in a fully representative democratic election

  9. How did Apartheid end? A complex web of internal and external pressures. Laws imploded due to widespread opposition. Western nations no longer fearing the influence of the Soviet Union began to withdraw financially in an effort to pressure the white minority government. Its culturally legacy is difficult to erase.

  10. Living Standards • In the 1950’s Port Elizabeth was overcrowded with poor black South Africans. • Black South Africans needed “papers” to do just about anything. Every aspect of their lives were controlled.

  11. Unsanitary shanty towns were erected but demolished by officials. Due to the 1953 Bantu Education Act, Willie and Sam were deprived of an education.

  12. South Africa • Africa is a continent, not a country. • South Africa is a country located on the tip of that continent.

  13. Please note! Sam and Willie are black South Africans. Hally is a white South African. Sam and Willie are not slaves, they are servants or employees.

  14. Thematic Ideas • Boyhood and Manhood • Teacher and Student • Personal and Political • Anger and Hatred • Forgiveness and Compassion • Human Rights • Coming of Age • Idealism and Realism

  15. Symbols and Metaphors • Dancing- a metaphor for life/the world • Characters use dancing as a means to make sense of the world around them. The way they view the world is reflected in how they view dancing. • For Sam, ballroom dancing contains implications of an ideal world. • Eventually, it comes to represent a world free of prejudice and inequality.

  16. Other Important Symbols • The Kite & The Bench • Rain & Foul skies • Looking down & Looking up • Social gestures- reflect political climate • Titles: • “boy”vs. Sam • Hally vs. Master Harold

  17. Warning! Racism is strongly suggested and directly expressed in this play. The play is a political allegory and represents the larger picture of what was taking place.

More Related