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30 pages 1 hour read

Riders to the Sea

Fiction | Play | Adult | Published in 1904

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Essay Topics

1.

How does the short, one-act structure of the play affect the narrative arc and audience experience?

2.

How does the play depict the effect of poverty on the family? Locate textual clues and evidence of poverty’s role in the family’s tragedies and lifestyle.

3.

Compare aspects of the Hiberno-English dialect in this play and in another play in which it is present. How does the dialect affect the audience’s interpretation of the culture, and how does it create this impact?

4.

Why might John Millington Synge have included the detail about Maurya and her daughters forgetting to buy nails for making the coffin?

5.

How does the cast of primarily women compare to the casts of other plays of the time period?

6.

Describe and give textual support to address the significance of the rope that Bartley asks Nora to retrieve.

7.

Describe and give textual support to address the significance of the bread that Cathleen was baking and forgets to give Bartley.

8.

Describe the role of the sea as a symbol or even a character in the story and provide textual examples.

9.

Consider Bartley and Maurya’s conversation (or lack thereof) before Bartley’s departure. What is the significance of the inclusion of this interaction?

10.

What is the importance of the specific stage instructions Synge provides for Cathleen on the opening of the play? Why does he require that she “do” so many tasks around the household, and why those tasks specifically?

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