coolloz said:
Id love some help with the roles of Birdboot and Moon in the Real Inspector Hound. Understanding their superficial role is easy but how do you use these characters to support an argument on conventions and crime fiction?
Stoppard was trying to take the piss out of the role of critics in the time of writing. he didn't really respect their role and position in the theatre- obviously because he was a playwright.
he uses the role of the critic, while making a statement about humanity's irresistable urge to role-play to virtually send himself up:
MOON: ...wihin the austere framework of what is seen to be on one level a country-house weekend...the author has given us-yes i will go so far-he has given us the human condition.
he's also commenting on the rivalry of critics- nonse to Stoppard as a playwright ofcourse, but fascinating to see done in his absurdist style. Birdboot's repulsive infatuation with the actresses also adresses Stoppard's view on theatre crititcs.
they actualise the dangers of wish-fulfilment in the text i think. they enter the tempting stage area, only to become twisted in the bizarre plot and ending up dead.
Thomas Whitaker said something about their roles too:
"Moon and Birdboot try to attain some "presence" or "identity" by means of sheer role-playing. But such attempts, eveident in their reviewer's jargon as their narcissistic daydreams of professional or erotic success, must draw them irresistibly on to a final "absence" or death."
bit of a wank. but HEY its extension 1 english! what else are we here to learn!!