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مقال تحليل دراماPlaywrights use the stage to convey a representation of the world to audiences, however, it is actually only ever one version of the world as they see it. Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is a classic Australiandrama, through which dramatist Ray Lawler provides a window into life in 1950's Australia. The play presents a unique version of the world, yet at the same time it portrays themes and truths that are universal about mankind, relationships and ageing. Lawler gives audiences rich insights into various aspects of gender issues and cultural identity issues, typical of Australian life in this period of time. The play is a story about a group of ordinary people, who are desperately trying to stay young and will not acknowledge the reality that they are aging. In their desperate bid to escape the inevitability of the consequences of change, the characters inflict hurt upon themselves and one another, evoking pity and compassion in audiences. Through the characters Lawler explores issues about Australian masculinity, mateship and social "norms". Lawler creates a particular version of the world in order to foreground the problems that he recognised in Australian society. Through presenting the particular "version of the world" that he does, Lawler comments on the need he sees for Australia to grow up. He challenges readers to examine and question the ideals, values and attitudes, which form their own "world", by exposing the limitations of lives based on the pursuit of unrealistic aspirations. Lawler constructs a version of the world through the setting, various symbols and the values, attitudes and ideas represented and explored by the characters.
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