RHINOCEROS
Eugène Ionesco
Key Facts
FULL
TITLE · Rhinoceros
AUTHOR · Eugène
Ionesco
TYPE
OF WORK · Drama
GENRE · Absurdist
drama/comedy
LANGUAGE · French
TIME
AND PLACE WRITTEN · Paris, 1959
DATE
OF FIRST PRODUCTION · Paris, 1960
PUBLISHER · Grove
Press
NARRATOR · No
narrator; drama
CLIMAX · The
climax is delivered in the final line of the play, when Berenger decides to
fight the rhinoceroses
PROTAGONIST · Berenger
ANTAGONIST · The
rhinoceroses
SETTING
(TIME) · Modern day
SETTING
(PLACE) · A small town
POINT
OF VIEW · As it is a play, there is no distinct point of view, but
the audience sides with Berenger, the only person who sees through the
rhinoceroses. However, Ionesco has the rhinoceroses grow more beautiful by the
end to represent the changing perceptions of the remaining humans (such as
Daisy), a fact that the audience cannot ignore.
FALLING
ACTION · There is no falling action; the curtain closes on
Berenger's climactic decision
TENSE · Play;
present tense
FORESHADOWING · Berenger
and Jean both show oppositions of character in relation to will (Berenger is
more responsible and committed than one might think, Jean less so).
TONE · Absurdly
comic, philosophical
THEMES · Will
and responsibility; absurdity and logic; fascism
MOTIFS · Bourgeois
alienation; escapism; harm/violence
SYMBOLS · Rhinoceroses
Context
Eugène Ionesco was one of the major figures in the Theatre of the
Absurd, the French dramatic movement of the 1940s and 50s that emphasized the
absurdity of the modern condition as defined by existential thinkers like
Jean-Paul Sartre. The existentialists followed Soren Kierkegaard's dictum that
"existence precedes essence"—that is, that man is born into the world
without a purpose, and that he must commit himself to a cause for his life to
have meaning. Absurdity and purposelessness frames Rhinoceros, which
is a study of a single man's transformation, from apathy to responsibility, as
the world around him descends into violence and greater levels of absurdity.
Born in Romania in 1912, Ionesco spent his childhood in Paris until his
family returned to its homeland. Ionesco quickly developed a hatred for
Romania's conservatism and anti-Semitism and, after winning an academic
scholarship, returned to France in 1938 to write a thesis. There, he met
anti-establishment writers such as Raymond Queneau. He lived in Marseille
during World War II. His first play, The Bald Soprano (1950),
a one-act piece that borrowed its phrasing from English language-instruction
books, garnered little public attention but earned Ionesco respect among the
Parisian avant-garde and helped inspire the Theatre of the Absurd.
Spearheaded by Samuel Beckett and other dramatists living in Paris, the
Theatre of the Absurd emphasized the absurdity of a world that could not be
explained by logic. The Absurdists' other major themes focused on alienation,
the specter of death, and the bourgeois mores that, they felt, had displaced
the significance of love and humanity in exchange for a diligent work ethic. In
the character of Berenger, a semi-autobiographical persona who figures in
several of Ionesco's plays, Ionesco portrays the modern man trapped in an
office, engaged in shallow relationships, and escaping with alcohol from a
world he does not understand. Yet this is all presented in the Theatre of the
Absurd's characteristic morbid wit, an often self-conscious, comic sensibility
that makes us laugh at the most horrific ideas—death, alienation, evil—in an
effort to understand them.
Ionesco wrote a number of plays in the 50s, but it was not untilRhinoceros (first
produced in 1960) that he received global attention. He called the play an
anti-Nazi work, and it was performed just long enough after World War II for
tensions to have settled down, but not so long that the almost visceral fear
associated with fascism had dissipated. The debut of Rhinoceros had
a reported fifty curtain calls in Germany. This is understandable; the play
demonstrates how anyone can fall victim to collective, unconscious thought by
allowing their wills to be manipulated by others. Walter Benjamin stated that
one could not write poetry after the Holocaust, and though others have since
refuted this as hyperbole, the world was indisputably damaged beyond repair and
left searching for answers. Ionesco skirted the problem of trying to represent
the Holocaust realistically by dressing his play in heavy but apparent
symbolism. Through this indirect path, achievable only through the untamed
techniques of the Theatre of the Absurd, he comes closer to answering the
unanswerable questions left in the wake of fascist brutality.
Ionesco remained a prolific writer until the early 1980s, although none
of his works, dramatic or critical, ever reached the same heights of tragedy
and comprehension as Rhinoceros. His work has influenced
playwrights as diverse as Harold Pinter and Sam Shepard. He died in 1994, but Rhinoceros is
still performed across the world as a reminder of the human capacity for
evil—when men consciously want to do evil, and, more frighteningly, when they
unconsciously desire it.
Plot Overview
Rhinoceros begins in a small town square where Jean, an
efficient, refined young man, meets his semi-alcoholic and fully apathetic
friend, Berenger, for a drink. Jean upbraids Berenger for his drinking habits
and his aimlessness. Soon, a rhinoceros runs through the square (off-stage),
shocking all the townspeople with the exception of the indifferent Berenger.
Jean lectures Berenger about will-power while a rational Logician explains the
concept of a syllogism to an old man. Berenger concedes that he has a crush on
Daisy, a typist at his office, but worries that she favors Dudard, an
up-and-coming co-worker. Jean recommends will-power and cultural self-
improvement to garner Daisy's affections, and to improve his life in general.
Another rhino rushes by and tramples a cat. The townspeople debate whether or
not it was the same rhino and what breed it was. Berenger and Jean get in a
fight over the physical specifics of the rhino, and Jean storms off after
calling Berenger a drunkard. The townspeople ask the Logician to clear up
confusion, but his lengthy analysis makes no progress. The townspeople vow to
stop the rhinos. Berenger expresses remorse for fighting with Jean, then says
he's too upset to culture himself as planned and instead drinks.
In Berenger's office, the co-workers argue with Botard, an old skeptic
who doesn't believe in the rhinos. Berenger arrives late, but Daisy sneaks him
in. The employees ask Berenger if he saw the rhino. Botard claims the illusory
appearance of the rhino is an example of "collective psychosis." They
return to work, proof-reading law proposals, and wonder where co-worker Mr.
Boeuf is. Mrs. Boeuf rushes in and says her husband is sick and will be back in
a few days. She tells them that she was just chased by a rhino, which is now
downstairs. The rhino crushes the staircase it tries to ascend, stranding the
workers. Mrs. Boeuf recognizes the rhino as her husband. Daisy telephones the
fire station to rescue them. The men give Mrs. Boeuf practical advice for
dealing with this setback, but she is too devoted to her rhino-husband and vows
to stay with him. She jumps down to the ground floor and (off-stage) rides off
on his back. More rhinos are reported in the town. The firemen arrive to help
them out the window. Botard vows he'll solve the rhino-riddle. Berenger passes
on an offer to drink with Dudard so he can visit Jean.
Jean coughs in bed at home. Berenger visits and apologizes for their
argument the previous day. At first, Jean has no recollection at all about the
rhinoceroses. Jean's voice grows more hoarse, a bump on his nose continues to
grow, and his skin gets greener by the moment. He becomes more misanthropic and
savage. Berenger informs him of Mr. Boeuf's transformation, which Jean
applauds. He moves in and out of the bathroom, each time appearing and sounding
more like a rhino. He pronounces humanism dead, sheds his itchy clothes, tries
to run down Berenger, apologizes, and runs into the bathroom. Berenger is about
to escape, but follows Jean into the bathroom to help him. Off-stage in the
bathroom, Jean attacks Berenger. Berenger escapes and closes the bathroom door
behind him (but is pierced by a rhino horn) as Jean, now a full-blown rhino,
tries to break free. Berenger alerts the tenants in the building to the rhino's
presence in the building, but everyone else has transformed as well. Berenger
looks out the window, where a herd of rhinos march. The bathroom door is on the
verge of breaking. Berenger throws himself against the wall and breaks through
it. He runs through the street, yelling "Rhinoceros!"
Berenger wakes up from a nightmare in his room and inspects himself for
any impending rhino-signs. Still human, he struggles not to drink, but
eventually does. Dudard visits and they discuss Jean's transformation, which
Berenger feels guilty about. They discuss the metamorphoses as an epidemic.
Berenger takes another drink, under the premise that alcohol is an
immunization. Dudard urges Berenger not to feel too guilty. Dudard reveals that
Papillon, their boss, has turned into a rhinoceros. Berenger believes that for
a man of Papillon's human stature to change, it must have been involuntary.
Dudard considers the metamorphoses natural, while Berenger continues to find
them abnormal. The flustered Berenger says he will seek the Logician's services
in clearing this up. A herd of rhinos passes and Berenger spots the Logician's
hat on a rhinoceros, a sign of metamorphosis, and vows not to become one as
well.
Daisy visits Berenger, which makes Dudard jealous. Daisy appears not to
care too deeply about the epidemic. She informs them that Botard has
metamorphosed. Berenger can't believe it, but then later rationalizes it. Daisy
and Dudard iterate that acclimating oneself to the rhinos is the best solution,
but Berenger resists. They start to have lunch, but are interrupted by a
crumbling wall outside. The fire station has been sacked, and the firemen have
turned into rhinos. Dudard leaves; he wants to experience the epidemic first-hand.
Berenger tries to stop him, but Daisy lets him go. Dudard soon turns into a
rhino outside. The sights and sounds of the rhinos become more beautiful
despite their savagery. Berenger laments Dudard's demise, and Daisy reminds
Berenger that they have no right to interfere in other's lives. She pours some
brandy for Berenger and removes his bandage—still no signs of a transformation.
Berenger claims he will defend her. He blames himself and Daisy for
contributing, through lack of sympathy, to the transformations of Jean and
Papillon, respectively. Daisy convinces him to shrug off the guilt. The phone
rings, but they hear only rhino trumpeting on the line. They turn to the radio
for help, but the rhinos have taken that over, as well.
Upstairs, a rhino stampede disrupts the house's foundations. Daisy
believes they must adapt to their new neighbors, but Berenger proposes they
regenerate the human race, like Adam and Eve. Daisy finds the power of the
rhinos seductive. Berenger slaps her, then apologizes and declares that he'll
never surrender and that he will protect her. She pledges her loyalty to him.
The noise of the rhinos becomes more musical to Daisy, though Berenger still
finds it savage and argues with her. Daisy breaks up with him and leaves. Berenger
barricades his room and plugs his ears. He doubts his own humanity. He inspects
photographs and cannot recognize any of his former friends—but he does identify
himself and hangs three of his pictures on the wall beside the rhino heads.
They turn out to be pictures of unattractive people and, compared to the
elegant rhino heads, are even more grotesque. He envies the bodies of the
rhinos, but at the brink of desperation, he nevertheless decides that he will
fight the rhinos.
Analysis
of Major Characters
Berenger
Berenger's transformation is the
true metamorphosis in Rhinoceros.While
the other characters physically turn into rhinoceroses, embodying the savage
natures they had formerly repressed, Berenger's change is moral and completely
opposite from his position at the start of the play. He begins as an aimless,
alienated Everyman who drinks too much and who finds little worth in life,
except for the beauty of Daisy, his co-worker. He is bored by his work, too
lazy to culture himself, and wonders if life is a dream—that is, if its
absurdity is the product of a dream-like state of absurd logic, and if life,
like a dream, is controlled by unconscious desires. Despite his escapism
through alcohol, he holds on tightly to his human identity, never comprehending
why someone would want to be anyone else. While his passivity is the underlying
cause of the metamorphoses, helping promote the climate of irresponsibility and
indifference, it is his recognition of life as an absurdity that prompts him to
change his character, rather than accept the presence of the rhinos. Yet he
remains indecisive nearly to the very end, losing his faith in humanity and
finding the rhinoceroses beautiful. In the last line of the play, however, he
overturns his weak will and lack of responsibility by deciding to save humanity
against the tyranny of the rhinos.
Berenger's decision, however, is
not totally unforeseen. His love of Daisy, as mentioned above, reveals he has
emotional desires for another human. At one point, when it seems to him that he
and Daisy will be united at the expense of their co-worker Dudard's departure
and metamorphosis, Berenger exclaims "Happiness is such an egotistical
thing!" Yet his desires turn out not to be so self-centered. Even when
Daisy abandons him to become a rhino, and when other friends insult him and do
the same, he feels guilty for pushing them out, although they would have
metamorphosed without him. He does not love Daisy alone; he loves humanity, and
is willing to take responsibility for its fate. This "will" of
responsibility, rather than the will of power the other characters treasure, is
what ultimately galvanizes Berenger's final line of resistance, "I'm not
capitulating!"
Jean
Jean epitomizes the Nietzschean
conception of the "super-man" who is above morality. He believes in
the strength of his will and rationalist intellect. His arrogance and unspoken
disdain for the common man, especially for Berenger's lackadaisical attitude
toward life, foreshadows his metamorphosis into a savage, vicious rhinoceros.
As the most fleshed-out character who transforms into a rhino, he symbolizes
the Nietzschean "will to power" of the fascist rhinos, their use of
strength and will to circumvent morality and return to a primal state of
nature. Yet Jean is ridden with hypocrisies and contradictions. He shows
himself from the start to be as irresponsible as Berenger, showing up late to
their meeting and refusing a day of culture to nap and drink. In fact, his
appreciation for self-improvement seems to stem from his view of education as
cultural capital, and not as an exploration of his humanity. He always
rationalizes these lapses after the fact, drawing on his vast reserves of logic
to skew the discussion. When Jean vows, as a rhino, that he will trample
Berenger and anyone who gets in his way, it is clear that his transformation
was a mere exchange of bodies, and not of morality.
Rhinoceroses
Though they are not human
characters, and they never appear on-stage in full form, the projections of
rhino heads and off-stage trumpeting dominates the play. The rhinoceroses
stand, above all, for man's latent savagery and capacity for violence. The
rhinos themselves are not to blame; they are generally a solitary species, as
Berenger notes, but the collective consciousness of man and the tendency toward
safety in numbers turns them into a hostile, totalitarian herd reminiscent of
Nazis. Nevertheless, Ionesco makes sure to flesh out the rhinoceroses'
characterizations. When Mr. Boeuf turns into a rhino, he trumpets tenderly to
his wife, who can recognize her husband through his green skin. Not all of
Boeuf's humanity is lost, and it appears that the individual man affects the
characteristics of the rhino he becomes. To nuance their depictions even more,
Ionesco has the rhinos become more beautiful and majestic as the play
progresses until, by the end of the play, they outshine the ugliness of
humanity. This technique makes the audience see how one's individual
perceptions can be altered by mass opinion, how the savage, destructive rhinos,
much like the Nazis, could be seductive to someone who doubts his own strength
and will.
Logician
Although he appears only in the
first act, the Logician, as his name suggests, represents the other rationalist
characters (Jean, Botard, Dudard) and one of the underlying premises of the
play and existentialist philosophy, that logic cannot explain everything. In
fact, Ionesco severely mocks the Logician's circular, comic train of thought,
which focuses on all the wrong questions and ends up with completely incorrect
answers or answers that re-pose the original question. We must recognize the
universe as absurd and nonsensical, Ionesco believes, in order to take any
meaning from it; the Logician and other characters resist this, though they
often succeed only in proving themselves absurd.
Daisy
Daisy appears as if she, along with
Berenger, cares deeply about humanity, but she continually urges Berenger to
acclimate himself and not to feel guilty about the rhinoceroses. Her love for
him appears as an ephemeral desire that flickers on and off, and in the end
love for only one person does not necessarily make one into a truly loving
person. In order to commit one's life to something outside oneself, as the
existentialists were concerned with, one must love all humanity. Daisy's
constant avoidance of responsibility and her lack of concern for her fellow man
reveals her desires for Berenger as selfish despite the good intentions she
often has for him (she tries to limit his alcohol intake, for instance, and
wants to assuage his guilt to make him happier). Understandably, she is seduced
by the beauty and power of the rhinos, something that offers her greater
pleasure than the "weakness" of human love, as she puts it. Her final
betrayal of Berenger in joining the rhinos incites his dramatic decision to
save humanity; it is his love for her (and the loss of it) that makes him feel
guilty and responsible and which allows him to see how much he loves humanity,
and not a single person, after all.
Themes
Will
and Responsibility
The transformation of Berenger from an apathetic,
alcoholic, and ennui- ridden man into the savior of humanity constitutes the
major theme of Rhinoceros, and the major
existential struggle: one must commit oneself to a significant cause in order
to give life meaning. Jean continually exhorts Berenger to exercise more
will-power and not surrender to life's pressures, and other characters, such as
Dudard, seem to do just that as they control their own destinies. Berenger does
not have great conventional will-power, as demonstrated by his frequent
recourse to alcohol and his tendency to dream (both daydreams and nightmares).
However, he maintains a steadfast, latent sense of responsibility after Act
One, often feeling guilty for the various rhinoceros-metamorphoses around
him—in a sense, his initial apathy was the cause, helping promote a climate of
indifference and irresponsibility. Furthermore, he shows early on that he at
least cares about Daisy, the only evidence in the play, other than Mrs. Boeuf's
devotion to Mr. Boeuf, of sincere love for another human. By Act Three, his
powerful guilt and sense of responsibility indicates that Berenger practices
the most selfless kind of love—unconditional love for all humanity, whereby he
is concerned for the welfare even of those who have scorned him. This
all-encompassing love is what gives his life meaning.
The supposedly strong characters, like Jean, fail the
ultimate test of will- power, the rhino-epidemic, and their crumbling wills are
foreshadowed by their subtler evasions of responsibility—Daisy, for instance,
wants to live a guiltless life. Their idea of will borrows from Friedrich
Nietzsche's concept of "the will to power." For them, will is a means
to metamorphose into Nietzsche's "super-man," a powerful being beyond
human morality. The savagery of the rhinos, and Jean's transformation and
statements in Act Two, exemplify this desire for power. He becomes violent,
claims humanism is dead, and tries to trample Berenger. The play's final irony
is that Berenger becomes the true super-man, gathering his resources of will,
built on a foundation of love for his fellow man, to take responsibility for
humanity.
Logic
and Absurdity
Rhinoceros exposes
the limitations of logic, and absurdity reigns as the dominating force in the
universe. Self-proclaimed rational characters, such as the Logician, Botard,
and Jean, either flounder in their proofs (the Logician, especially) or ridiculously
rationalize their incorrect presumptions—consider Botard's accusation of a
conspiracy in Act Two. The Logician's attempts to uncover how many rhinoceroses
there were in the first act, and what breeds they were, results only in
re-posing the original question. In Act One, Berenger calls Jean's ideas
"nonsense," and this word resonates throughoutRhinoceros. The world is
nonsensical, absurd, and defies the extent of logic. As Berenger says, if one
were to read about the rhinoceros events in a newspaper, away from the action,
one could be rational and detached, but in the midst of things one can't help
getting involved. The balance between detached distance and intimate confusion
divides the supposedly logical characters from Berenger. They maintain their
logical distance until confronted with a real problem, when their logic
implodes. Berenger concedes absurdity from the outset—"life is a
dream," he says, alluding to the inexplicable randomness around him—and
this enables him to understand the absurdity of the metamorphoses better, even
though he never arrives at a logical "solution." Recognizing the
world as absurd, Ionesco suggests, is the first step in cobbling together a
meaningful life.
Fascism
The "epidemic" of the rhinoceroses serves as a
convenient allegory for the mass uprising of Nazism and fascism before and
during World War II. Ionesco's main reason for writing Rhinoceros is not simply to
criticize the horrors of Nazis, but to explore the mentality of those who so
easily succumbed to Nazism. A universal consciousness that subverts individual
free thought and will defines this mentality; in other words, people get rolled
up in the snowball of general opinion around them, and they start thinking what
others are thinking. In the play, people repeat ideas others have said earlier,
or simultaneously say the same things. Once other people, especially authority
figures, collapse in the play, the remaining humans find it even easier to
justify why the metamorphoses are desirable. Ionesco is careful not to make his
play a one-sided critique of the brutality of Nazism. The rhinos become more
beautiful as the play progresses until they overshadow the ugliness of
humanity, and the audience is forced to recognize that an impressionable
individual might have similarly perceived the swelling ranks of Nazis as
superior. In fact, Dudard's desire to join the "universal family" of
the rhinos points to the notion of the rhinos as an Aryan master race,
physically superior to the rest of humanity. Nevertheless, they are still
morally repugnant, escalating their violence over the course of the play.
Ionesco carefully traces an argument against John
Stuart Mill's "harm principle," which states that individual
freedom should be preserved so long as it does not harm anyone else. Ionesco
demonstrates that passively allowing the rhinos to go on—or, allegorically,
turning a blind eye to fascism, as individual citizens and entire countries did
in the 1930s—is as harmful as direct violence.
Motifs
Theatre
of the Absurd
In the tradition of Samuel
Beckett's Waiting
for Godot, Jean-Paul
Sartre's No
Exit, and
Harold Pinter's plays, Ionesco's drama combines abstract philosophical ideas
with concrete humor. The various rationalizations that characters come up with
to explain their previous errors delight us with their silliness, but they also
suggest deeper ideas about logic and responsibility. As many of the plays from
the Theatre of the Absurd go, Rhinoceros is conscious of
itself as a play, as when Jean suggests Berenger sees one of Ionesco's plays,
but more so in the ways that it forces the audience to recognize the production
before them as a play and not as a diversion. A production with back-lit
rhinoceros heads stakes no claim to the typical drama's attempts to suspend the
audience's disbelief, but this is the point: Ionesco breaks the "fourth wall"
of the theater (and numerous other walls and structures explode in the play) to
make the audience leave the theater feeling that the absurdity they witnessed
was somehow more real than a "realistic" play.
Bourgeois
life
Ionesco makes a number of critiques of the emptiness of
the bourgeois working world. The root of Berenger's apathy seems to spring from
his boring job, and Act Two presents us with the drudgery of his office, its
repetitive work, and its shallow relationships built to serve the corporation.
Jean recommends that Berenger improve his cultural vocabulary, but Jean's
appreciation for the avant- garde theater, for instance, is clearly only a
surface interest or he would not succumb so easily to the rhinoceroses.
Berenger's reliance upon alcohol is understandable—the ennui of daily life is
too great not to escape. In fact, the escapism of alcohol is a trope for the
escapism of the metamorphoses; both Berenger and the others feel they regain
their lost identities in their respective escapes. The others, then, are
similarly oppressed by their jobs (Jean feels it is something one must get used
to), though Berenger seems to be the only one who has a deeper awareness of the
way bourgeois life crushes his spirit.
Symbols
Rhinoceroses
The rhinoceroses are a blunt symbol of man's inherent
savage nature but, to Ionesco's credit, the articulation of this idea deploys
slowly throughout the play: the first rhino causes no apparent damage; the
second one tramples a cat; later ones destroy more property and Jean-as-rhinoceros
attacks Berenger. They represent both fascist tyranny and the absurdity of a
universe that could produce such metamorphoses. These ideas crystallize into
one question: how could humans be this savage, allowing the barbarity of World
War II Nazism? Ionesco answers this in a variety of ways. He equates the
epidemic of the metamorphoses with the ways the ideals of Nazism can infect the
unconscious minds of individuals. Yet the rhinos become more beautiful and
humans more ugly by the end of the play. They are beautiful, however, because
of their brute strength and power; true beauty, as Berenger demonstrates when
he finally decides to fight the rhinos and save humanity, lies in moral
strength.
Important Quotations Explained
"I sometimes wonder if I exist myself."
Berenger's
statement in Act One expresses existential doubt and counters the well-known
philosophical premise of 17th-century philosopher Rene Descartes,
considered a cornerstone of Western philosophy. Descartes said, "I think,
therefore I am," or, in other words, the ability to think is the only
proof of existence. Berenger's thinking that he may not exist
articulates the foundation of existentialist philosophy, the formula
"existence precedes essence," which states that humans are born
("existence") before they gain any soul or meaning in life
("essence"). However, for Berenger, neither physical nor mental
existence is enough to count for true existence; he needs a life committed to
something significant. His overriding love for humanity and decision to save
them constitutes his essence.
"There are certain things which enter the minds of even people
without one."
Jean's insult to Berenger in Act One helps explain, in a different
context, how millions were swayed to fascism. Ionesco builds up a concept of
collective consciousness (later referred to in the play as "collective
psychosis"), a universal mentality that compromises the individual mind.
These minds, like Berenger's, evade responsibility and choice and allow
external ideas to enter without an internal check. After World War II, people
were wondering how the widespread fascist atrocities could have taken place,
how such brutal ideas could have engaged humanity. Ionesco's play attempts to
posit an answer, pinning the blame less on man's tendency to evil than his
tendency not to think for himself.
"So then logically speaking, my dog must be a cat?"
"Logically, yes. But the contrary is also true."
This exchange comes at the end of the Logician's syllogism-tutorial of
the Old Gentleman in Act One. In a world in which the atrocities of fascism can
take place, Ionesco classifies the logic that orders the universe as absurd and
inexplicable, beyond human rationality. The Logician is mercilessly parodied
for his comic missteps in proving even a simple syllogism, as here, or when he
unsuccessfully tries to explain why the rhinoceroses are appearing. In this
scene, Ionesco demonstrates the inapplicability of logic to human emotion as he
parallels the Logician's incoherent proof with Berenger's attempts to provide
some rational reason for his unhappiness./EXPLANATION
"When you're involved yourself…you can't help feeling directly
concerned."
To answer why other countries, such as the US, failed to react swiftly
to Nazi atrocities, Ionesco reminds us that when one is not in the midst of
conflict, it is easy to be a detached observer. Only through his position in a
world of overt absurdity does Berenger (in Act Three) begin to acknowledge the
necessity to commit to a life of significance. Berenger's prior apathy towards
life did contribute to the overall lack of will that made the epidemic possible.
Yet it is this original indifference, combined with his awareness of the absurd
universe, which galvanizes his own metamorphosis into a being committed to free
will.
"I'm not capitulating!"
These words of Berenger's close the curtain on the play, and fully
transform his character from being indifferent and alienated to committed and
humane. His will wavers many times after Daisy leaves (shortly before this
quote), and he seems on the verge of joining the rhinos. But his will, which
was foreshadowed as strongly committed to individualism and humanity despite
its conventional weaknesses (his propensity to drink, his apathy towards his
job, his lateness), comes through in the end. Some may read this as an
ambiguous ending, since Berenger might simply change his mind again after the
curtain closes, but the optimistic note the play ends on reinforces the idea
that, in an absurd world, we must commit ourselves to something significant to
lend meaning to the absurdity.
Study Questions and Essay Topics
Study Questions
What do the
various contradictions of the characters say about them, and about the world of Rhinoceros?
Consider Berenger and Jean, for example.
Despite being
foils, Berenger and Jean seem to trade places often throughout the play. After
Jean counsels Berenger on how to lead a better life, Berenger asks Jean to
accompany him to the museum and a play, but Jean declines because he is going
to take a nap and has to meet a friend for a drink. While he rationalizes his
decisions as mere lapses, it is clear that Jean's resolve is not as powerful as
he would like others to believe. Rather, he exercises his will only when it can
gain him power, and not when it asserts his individual humanity; his
appreciation for culture, it seems, is only an exercise in self-improvement in
order to gain power. Berenger, on the other hand, appears totally passive and
apathetic at first, but he shows hints of commitment and responsibility even early
on: he loves Daisy; he visits Jean to apologize for their fight; he tries to
resist alcohol (though he usually fails). At the very least, he is always aware
of his escapist tendencies. While contradictions are an inherent part of any
complex literary (and real-life) character, in Ionesco's play these
contradictions can be characterized as absurd. Berenger, for instance, defies
his strong individualist stance by parroting the exact language of others to
indicate that he, too, is a victim of either collective consciousness or of
absurd coincidence.
Do the
rhinoceroses maintain their human identities, or are they strictly savage
beasts?
The first
rhinoceros about whom we have some knowledge is Mr. Boeuf. He trumpets tenderly
to Mrs. Boeuf upstairs in the office and tries to reach her. She recognizes
him, showing that not all his humanity is gone. Her love and devotion is so
strong, even, that she resists practical advice about insurance and a divorce
and jumps on her husband's back. The Boeufs are clearly an exception; their
relationship is the only evidence of true love and commitment to one other
person in the play. Later, Berenger, Daisy, and Dudard discuss the problem of
how to dispatch with the rhinos when they include former loved ones and
relatives. It is clear that others have devolved into far more violent
creatures; the rhino-personality is what they make of it. Jean epitomizes this.
His irascible temper, desire for power, and misanthropy manifest themselves in
a wild, harmful rhino that tries to mow down Berenger. Yet the rhinos later
develop into beautiful, melodic creatures, as Ionesco tries to make the
audience see how one's judgment can be altered by public perception.
Discuss Ionesco's
dramatic techniques of repetition and parallelism.
At many points in
the play, a number of characters say the same thing either simultaneously or
nearly simultaneously, such as "Oh, a rhinoceros!" or "Well, of
all things!" Characters often echo previous dialogue, as well. These
repetitions are indications of a collective consciousness at work, and of the
triviality of everyday language and emotion. No one seems too be disrupted by
the appearance of a rhinoceros, so they remark on it with appropriate levels of
disinterest. Ionesco also stages two separate dialogues at the same time, most
prominently in the first act, when Jean tutors Berenger and the Logician tutors
the Old Man. While the dialogue does not exactly match up, each set (the tutor
or student) speaks about similar topics. The Logician's atrocious mishandling
of logic shadows the incompatibility of logic with human emotion and alienation
in Berenger's conversation.
Trace the progression of harm and
violence in the play and the characters' reactions to it. Use John Stuart
Mill's "harm principle" from On
Liberty as
a starting point (the harm principle states that individual freedom should be
preserved so long as it does not directly harm anyone else).
What is the function of Ionesco's use of
comedy? Does it distract us from the idea at hand, or call more attention to
it?
No full-blown rhinoceroses appear
directly on-stage. Aside from the physical difficulties this would present, why
does Ionesco refrain from showing us what an actual rhino looks like?
Daisy says that you can only predict
something once it has happened. Many characters in the play make incorrect
assumptions, and then rationalize these after they have been disproved. Discuss
the implications of these retroactive "predictions."
What is Ionesco's take on the workplace?
How does this influence the rest of the play?
The Theatre of
the Absurd is a term for a distinct style of drama written largely by European
playwrights in the 1940s–1960s, though it has become something of a tradition
that lives on. On the whole, the Theatre of the Absurd rebelled against
theatrical traditions and expressed a confusing, seemingly meaningless world
where people encounter bizarre or absurd circumstances. It changed the way
comedy was expressed in the theatrical tradition, often combining broad comedy
with horrific situations to produce tragicomedy in the line of, say,
Shakespeare, the Marx Brothers, and Charlie Chaplin. Arguably, the Theatre of
the Absurd found a way to hit the audience hard with both the tragedy and the
comedy, discomforting the audience and withholding the catharsis.
English critic Martin Esslin coined the term in his
1961 book Theatre of the Absurd, and the style came to be
associated with such playwrights as Eugène Ionesco, Arthur Adamov, Jean Genet,
and Samuel Beckett. Other playwrights came to be known as “absurdist,”
including Edward Albee, Jean Tardieu, and Tom Stoppard. Although each one
unquestionably maintains a distinct voice and theatrical style, their collective
work shares particular concerns.
Although critics
consider the Theatre of the Absurd separate from existentialism, the two
movements (if one can call them that) share a concern with a philosophical
understanding of the purpose of life and what meaning (if any) life might have.
The absurdist plays employ nonsense to suggest such fundamental questions in
surprising, unusual ways. Most of the time, most people are not living in the
horrific circumstances of, say, the world wars, and they go about their normal
lives without confronting the fundamental questions very often. The absurdist
plays often shake us up and tend to remind individuals of our strange isolation
despite our being surrounded by society and culture.
In Ionesco’s Rhinoceros, for example, what begins as a humorous
phenomenon of men turning into rhinoceroses becomes unsettling, even
horrifying, as every human being (save one) turns into a vicious animal. In
traditional comedies or tragedies, the audience stays in the mood or laughing
or crying. But Rhinoceros and
other absurdist works leave the audience hovering somewhere in between, more
alert to the strange complexity of life but not sure what to do or to think
about it.
The Theatre of the Absurd also rejects traditional
plot structures, following an artistic trend in the early 20th century (even
though untraditional plot structures were not new in that generation). Theatre
of the Absurd further confuses the audience by reveling in the idea of
nonsense. The movement is often linked to Dadaism, a cultural movement that
developed in Europe after World War I and celebrated chaos and irrationality.
The absurdist playwrights reveal similar concerns as they develop characters
who are often lost in incomprehensible worlds. Scenes often repeat (as in
Ionesco’s Bald Soprano), and often the language repeats (as in
his Rhinoceros).
Many works also center around unresolved mysteries or
the idea of nothingness itself. In Ionesco’s The Chairs, for example, an elderly couple throws a
party in their house for guests who are invisible to the audience. In Beckett’s Waiting
for Godot, two characters spend an entire play waiting for
someone to arrive–but he never does. Without the traditional dramatic techniques
that depend on a plot in forward motion, a play can hardly survive, so the
plays do have at least some direction and connections. Even so, the absurdist
plays confuse the audience by destroying most of the basic theatrical
expectations.
Although
absurdist elements continue to arise in modern theatre, critics tend to tie the
first generation of such plays together as a movement in a particular time and
place. Centered in Paris and generally concluded by 1970, the movement was a
remarkably innovative period of theatre when playwrights discomforted their
audiences, dismantled traditions, and deconstructed their own form of art.
While the atrocities of the world wars and the anxiety of the Cold War have
been fading in Western memory, the issues of understanding and meaning that
humans face are no less critical.
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