What, the play doesn't involve Jedi Knights, helicopters, and sports cars? What a letdown!Just kidding, I thought it was interesting.
At first read, I was posed with a question of purpose, of what this play is about, what does it stand for? But after a reread and a quick websearch, my thoughts were confirmed, it's an apartheid era play that compares the current system to the corrupt Greek system in Antigone. I liked it. Besides the obvious comparison of two corrupt methods of governing, I greatly enjoyed the portrayal of prison life. I think that this image, of life in prison, has received a lot of media attention from early times on. Bible times when that fellow wrote some sacred text while in prison, books written in prison, manifestoes...it's almost like being in prison is a form of activism. Do one normal, everyday action in prison, and all of a sudden it is a form of activism. I suppose everyone in prison could be considered a political activist. They are there for a reason, be it fair or unfair. If it is a fair, (let's pretend that there are only two sides here) the person clearly thought poorly of the law he or she broke, and therefore practiced civil disobedience, and went to jail for it. Clearly this person didn't agree with the current legislation, so he threw it out of the window, his prison sentence being his silent protest. Now if one were incarcerated for little to no reason, the prison sentence is in itself activism, showing the crookedness of our system of law.
Now I also enjoyed the part in which the degrading of the prisoners to children was the focus. What better way to break one's spirit than convincing them that they are reverting back to childhood, or at least making them feel the part. It's such a horrible tactic really, stripping away all maturity from the inmates, and taking them back not to the pleasant childhood where fond, careless memories exist, but instead to the terrible part of childhood. The phase of having no voice, no say, where one's opinion did not matter at all. The phase where life is governed by someone else, and free decisions are nonexistent. Yes, make one feel like an oppressed child, and the spirit is gone.
AHHH, never going to find that clip I'm looking for. Barbie is pleasant enough I guess.



