The Goat Literary Elements

The Goat Literary Elements

Genre

Play, Drama

Language

English

Setting and Context

The "Western World," modern-day

Narrator and Point of View

Play

Tone and Mood

Tone - Engrossed, dramatic
Mood - Shocked, perturbed

Protagonist and Antagonist

Protagonists - Martin, Stevie, Ross, Billy; Antagonist - Martin's love for a goat, Sylvia

Major Conflict

Martin loves a goat named Sylvia and views it like a typical affair in terms of how he expects it to split his family.

Climax

Ross, a family friend, writes Stevie a letter including the information about Martin and the Goat; she confronts Martin, and he does not deny the news.

Foreshadowing

Martin tells Ross about Sylvia, and the audience can sense that the knowledge of this will return to his family.

Understatement

Martin has many understatements about the perceived normalcy of loving a goat, and Stevie often uses understatements out of shock.

Allusions

The six-word title contains two allusions. The Shakespearean song "Who is Sylvia?" provides the second part of the title, and the concept of a "goat song," or Greek tragedy, makes up the first.

Imagery

The direction of the play provides imagery primarily in how the characters physically relate to one another, since the bulk of the play takes place in Martin, Stevie, and Billy's living room. Through this, the audience sees how Martin and Stevie fight using their knowledge of the room and how Billy enters and exits.

Paradox

Martin seeks to justify his behavior by showing how much he loves Sylvia, but his family is more and more disturbed the more he talks about how he has emotions for a goat.

Parallelism

Martin becomes comfortable talking about what he once felt he had to hide as his family increasingly wishes he would be ashamed.

Personification

The goat, Sylvia, is given personal characteristics by Martin throughout the play, and this personification is his primary mode of interaction with other characters as the conflict escalates.

Use of Dramatic Devices

Albee uses stage directions for the bulk majority of lines to show exactly how they ought to be spoken. This allows the nuances of characters to be implanted in what is spoken, freeing the actors to exhibit the personal characteristics of their parts during the play. He also uses a disconnect in the typical material of a play and what Martin considers to be "going on" by repeatedly maintaining a state of interjection between Stevie and Billy, Martin's closest relatives.

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