**

Comparative Survey, Descriptive Research

  Comparative survey research is a type of descriptive survey where it aims to compare the status of two or more variable, institutions, strategies etc. This technique often uses multiple disciplines in one study.This does not only compare different groups but also same group over time.Few points are to be kept in mind before starting the comparative survey. ·        Comparison Points -The research should be very clear regarding the points to be compared. This can also be identified through review of literature and experience of experts. ·        Assumption of Similarities -  One has to be clear about the similarities the two variable hold. If the researcher do not find this there is no point of comparison. Criteria of Comparison - The researcher has to identify the criteria of comparison keeping in mind the fairness and objectivity. Appropriate tools has to be identified for measurement of criterion variables. Comparative survey research is carried on when the researcher cannot

Character Sketch of Christy Mohan in The Playboy of the Western World

Relevance of Title                          Theme
John Millington Synge (1871-1909) is considered as the greatest dramatist of the Irish Literary revival. The characters drawn by him were real human beings of flesh and blood. He did allow his feelings to colour his portraits. A.C. Collins notices a Shakespearean touch in The Playboy of the Western World. He says,

No doubt, neither Pegeen nor the other girls, nor indeed any of the characters are even likely, but, whatever Ireland thought the outer world could rejoice is the vitality and humour of the conception. Here was human nature simple and crude, cunning and brutal, greedy, spiteful and changeable but warm in the blood and capable of poetry…

Synge did not agree with the Irish patriots who presented all Irish men as noble and women as virtuoso. He presents real life human beings at its best and at its worst, in spirituality and in animal savagery. In the present play Synge has given us picture of the ways and manners, the joys and sorrows, the whims and follies of the peasants of Mayo, a country in western Ireland. In the play, Christy (Christopher) Mohan is basically an extremely naïve and likeable character whose lies are more in the nature of his unconscious fantasies which grow with the active help of Mayo crowd, particularly Pegeen and other girls. We laugh at his boastfulness and also like and sympathise him.

Christy is a shy, ignorant and humble son of a farmer Old Mohan. Though he worked very hard but was cruelly dominated by his father. He was neglected, mocked and also ill-treated by others. Christy hit his father with spade and thought was killed when he forced him to marry a rich old widow. He tells to Pegeen,

Upto the day I killed my father, there wasn’t a person in Ireland knew the kind I was. And, I there, drinking, waking, eating, sleeping, a quiet simple poor fellow with no man giving me heed.

After the incident, Christy took shelter in Aran Islands. The people of that place (Mayo) instead of treating him as criminal, regarded as a hero. Thereby, he distinguishes himself in the village sports. He falls in love with Pegeen and charms her with his imaginative power. His love which he finds fully reciprocated releases springs of poetic eloquence in him. The growth of Christy’s fantasies is also an earnest of his growing confidence in him. This is true that he is continually deflated, but he is also amazed at the interest that he has been able to arouse in the people of Mayo and he begins to discover himself as new. By the time he is exposed his personality is completely changed. He also transforms Pegeen from being a sharp tongued woman into one who is gentle and eloquent.

The classical elements of reversal and recognition have a great impact on Christy’s character. The reversal in his fortunes follow the return of his father and recognition of his new self comes to him not long after. He feels angry with the mob for a very short period but soon recovers and before going away blesses the Mayo people for turning him into a ‘likely gaffer’. He makes his triumphant exit with his father confident in his belief that here onwards he will be master of all fights. His self-discovery leads him to have a mature and confident personality.

There is a great controversy among critics regarding the real nature of Christy. His name sounds like that of Christ. The question is whether the similarity is accidental or intentional. Some critics have raised him to the level of Christ, while others regard him as an anti-Christ. W.H.Maclean points a close parallel, saying that Synge called him Christy because his nature is similar to that of Christ. But according to Alan Price the play shows the transformation of a weakling into a hero. Whereas, Una Ellis-Fermor says that the play shows a dribbling idiot being developed into a poet hero. Critics like H.D.Pearce do not agree that Christy can be called a hero; rather he is only a leader of destruction and discard.

Therefore, one can say that as a result of his experiences in Mayo, Christy becomes a wise, self-confident and mature person who can no more be tyrannised over by anyone.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Justify the Title ‘Heart of Darkness’ by Joseph Conrad

Character Sketch of KURTZ in Heart Of Darkness

Bring out the Autobiographical Elements in Sons and Lovers

Short Note on RASA and DHVANI

Justification of the Title LOOK BACK IN ANGER