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"Youths of today are leaders of tomorrow" - Trotiycleaytom

Rhinoceros

  • Date Submitted: 01/27/2010 11:23 PM
  • Flesch-Kincaid Score: 55.4 
  • Words: 610
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The human race has advanced over many years, and during this time, moral standards have developed.   These moral standards, distinctively different from the laws of nature, are standards set specifically for humans.   The play Rhinoceros, written by playwright Eugene Ionesco, associates this difference in moral standards and laws of nature.   Ionesco uses Jean, a French businessman, to display the differences between these two ways of life.   In Act I, Jean believes in the values of the society, moral standards, but as he changes into a beastly rhinoceros in Act II, his beliefs begin to change; the dramatic transformation of Jean displays the difference in the laws of man and the laws of beast.  


The laws of man contain society values such as manners and friendship.   In Act I, Jean abides these values absolutely, and this is reflected in his personality and physical qualities such as his way of dress.   Jean enters the first scene, “fastidiously dressed in a brown suit, red tie, stiff collar and a brown hat…his shoes are yellow and well polished.   He wears gloves and carries a cane” (6).   Jean, in this case, is a typical example of today’s society and how people care too much about his/her appearance.   Appearance determines class, and Jean follows these society values to show that he has class.   In addition to this, he attempts to show that he has class and is manly by persistently explaining that “[he is] strong,” and “[he is] strong for several reasons.   In the first place [he is] strong because [he is] naturally strong – and secondly…because [he has] moral strength” (23).   Once more Jean displays a belief in moral standards, the belief that strength is an attribute that determines the difference between a deserving or undeserving person.   These beliefs, on the other hand, are incredibly different from those of nature.  


In the world of Mother Nature’s, animals do not follow moral standards, but believe in the survival of the fittest.   Amazingly,...

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