Thursday, December 1, 2011

CAPSTONE: Cultural Event- In the Next Room(or the Vibrator Play)...yea


The Vibrator Play...
Did that get your attention?
The play is actually a well written funny play. It centers around the doctor’s prescription of “pleasure” for hysteria. 
     According to the play’s program “hysteria” was a female medical condition categorized by symptoms like unhappinessness, faintness, and “occasionally, the unwillingness to obey’s one husband.” Prescription: orgasm. 
     How is this cultural...well sexual topics in general have been in society, in culture for years. Yet during certain time periods speaking about these subjects openly was taboo. Now there’s Playboy and various reality shows showing people suggestive situations. 
     This play however is set after the Civil War in the 1880s when I assume people did not understand “pleasures” as today. For when the vibrator was used on the patients the reactions were like the did not know what the feeling was or never experienced these feelings before. Seems like there was a lack of understanding of sexually in those times by some. Certainly there was a lack of sexually in popular culture in those times as well. The reactions were a funny part of the play but the reactions between the characters were as well.
     Yet there is a painter character in the play that does know of pleasures with woman. He has a carefree personality. He gives another dimension of the type of people in those times. Even though some may have been uptight back then with covered up dresses and suits there were still those who were easygoing with open sweaters and loose scarfs. 
     Another character Catherine Givings wife of Dr. Givings, the doctor giving the “prescriptions” has a very upbeat personality. She loves to talk but feels lonely from her husband since he seems so busy with work or going out after work. These times in marriages were seen then as they are now.
     Times change. History lets us now how things can about. The invention of the vibrator made people more “carefree”. Birthing the emergence of a more sexuality accepting culture. 

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