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11 - The Caucasian Chalk Circle: the view from Europe

from Part II - The Plays

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2007

Peter Thomson
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Glendyr Sacks
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
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Summary

Written between 1941 and 1944 during Brecht's exile in the United States, The Caucasian Chalk Circle is made up of two stories, Grusha's, which starts in Scene 2, and Azdak's, which does not begin until Scene 5, the penultimate scene of the play. These two stories converge in Scene 6 where the problems that had been posed at the outset and highlighted throughout the sequences involving Grusha are resolved, thus bringing the whole action to a more or less 'happy' end. Since happy endings are not characteristic of Brecht's drama, this particular example of harmonious conclusion to anything but harmonious events (and to anything but a transparent argument) has prompted a number of commentators to draw special attention to the 'liberating, life-enhancing quality' of the play or its 'unified understanding'. The scholars who emphasise the joyful, morally affirmative and/or politically optimistic outlook provided by the play's dénouement are usually also the ones who believe its two stories are organically linked. Their opinion runs counter to the authoritative view of John Willett and Ralph Manheim for whom the work is an 'awkward combination of two largely unrelated stories', despite which it is nevertheless 'a truly epic work embodying many of Brecht's special ideas, tastes, and talents'.

Disagreement over the play's structure and its implications for the meaning of the whole is an inevitable consequence of Azdak's arriving so late in the piece. By this time Grusha's story has almost run its course. The revolt led by the fat prince against Georgi Abashvili, Governor of Grusinia, has taken place, as a result of which the Governor is executed.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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