"Waiting for Godot" Explained with Philosophy | Philosophy Tube

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  • čas přidán 24. 11. 2016
  • Samuel Beckett’s absurdist masterpiece “Waiting for Godot” is one of the most famous pieces of 20th Century Theatre - but what are the philosophical questions it raises? How does the story of its creation tie in with Albert Camus, and the Nazi invasion of France?
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    Transcript of this Episode: tinyurl.com/gq7sy94
    Samuel Beckett, “Waiting for Godot” tinyurl.com/gnrjv6y
    Albert Camus, “The Myth of Sisyphus” tinyurl.com/zvtrbpe
    Music by Epidemic Sound (Epidemicsound.com)
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Komentáře • 774

  • @jamilahmad5937
    @jamilahmad5937 Před 4 lety +387

    “Not everyone has a God but who does not have a Godot?” I once read this sentence in an article in the New Yorker.

  • @professorskye
    @professorskye Před 3 lety +127

    As a professor of French, I truly thank Abigail for this great summary of the play and its philosophical underpinnings. I will show this to my students semester and it will save me quite a bit of class time to dedicate to more of a textual analysis.
    Also, everyone who is making fun of her French needs to get ALLLLL the way off of her back. Sure, there is an accent, but for a person from the anglophone world, her French is exquisite. Part of the reason that it is hard to learn French is that people who speak it are too protective and cruel. Stop it! More in French!

    • @brynawaldman5790
      @brynawaldman5790 Před rokem +1

      Yes! My French is minimal, & she speaks slowly so I understand it without the subtitles, which I like very, very much!

    • @cara-setun
      @cara-setun Před 8 měsíci +1

      Who is abigail?

    • @tedhanlon7822
      @tedhanlon7822 Před 8 měsíci

      Omg your video on The Struggler inspired me to read this book!!

    • @LyricalFauxpas
      @LyricalFauxpas Před 4 měsíci

      4 months later and I'm wondering the same thing 🤣@@cara-setun

    • @phlegm_mucus
      @phlegm_mucus Před měsícem

      @@LyricalFauxpas and @cara-seyun the lovely person in the video is transgender. They now go by Abigail.

  • @zoeygreenwald5730
    @zoeygreenwald5730 Před 5 lety +216

    Me: watches old Philosophy Tube vids to put off writing an essay on Waiting for Godot for English class
    This Video: Exists

  • @victorvvc1925
    @victorvvc1925 Před 4 lety +138

    I always wondered why Lucky has that name, when he should be the most miserable of the characters, and you really came with a great answer to that one!

    • @GeorgeMonsour
      @GeorgeMonsour Před rokem +2

      @@xxy9420 Lucky being the irony of existence
      Sounds like the message

  • @dazpatreg
    @dazpatreg Před 7 lety +270

    Interesting titbit; the name 'Godot' is thought to be a franco-literation of the Irish language term 'go deo' which is pronounced almost exactly the same. This is a conceit on the part of Beckett because 'go deo' means 'FOREVER' *ominous music*

    • @HandleGF
      @HandleGF Před 5 lety +6

      It's not pronounced the same... it's god-o v. gud-yo (i.e. go deo)

    • @Thejampacker
      @Thejampacker Před 4 lety +14

      John F I’d even go as far as to say it’s ‘gu-djo’ but I’m from Kerry. All the same I’m buying into this theory big time.

    • @DPC2424
      @DPC2424 Před 4 lety +4

      'No symbols where none intended.' Samuel Beckett.

    • @smnwbb
      @smnwbb Před 4 lety +8

      Didn't SB say that if Godot was god, he'd have said so? Godot was a famous cyclist of the day in velodromes, circular tracks.

    • @smnwbb
      @smnwbb Před 4 lety +4

      @@DPC2424 Exactly - we should take him at his word!

  • @62sugarbear
    @62sugarbear Před 7 lety +216

    Godot is whatever or who ever it is that you wait for. Ultimately, we wait for the body to wear out so we can die. Until that happens, The only thing you can do is fill up the time with distractions. The play is very popular in Prisons.

    • @bobpolo2964
      @bobpolo2964 Před 5 lety +3

      There is a better way

    • @aDarkNightofTheSoul
      @aDarkNightofTheSoul Před 5 lety +3

      For liberals/democrats, we have the Mueller investigation, which gives them a reason to live by providing a false sense of hope. Upon conclusion, however, they are overcome with a renewed sense of despair.

    • @sneakykilla12
      @sneakykilla12 Před 5 lety

      ​@@aDarkNightofTheSoul Hey man I'd suggest you relax, for I wouldn't get over-involved with that kind of thing. It seems unhealthy. Being that enveloped in the Anti-Trump movement might cause some mental distress. Trump's impeachment will happen or it won't, and you must accept the fact of both and move on. On the other hand, I believe that it is based on perspective. It seems too cynical for me to accept that we all live to die and that's it, due to the fact that I can see it in a different light other than distractions or denial. My philosophy is as follows; you live your life for the benefit and well-being of others and the improvement of society, while gathering as much wisdom and knowledge as possible. For one day, it may be passed onto another generation to build upon, coming closer to the truth. We all know Socrates. Question everything!

    • @mev0759
      @mev0759 Před 5 lety +1

      @@sneakykilla12 Getting philosophical? What about Karma and past lives? Would'nt that affect your current life, behavior especially? Lol. Couldn't help it. I love Beckett, Camus, Kafka.... the doom and bleakness, there's a beauty in that and when you add the rhythm of Beckett's works , that's beautifully genius! But I don't believe the universe is pointless. I think it feels that way sometimes and it seems impossible otherwise, but nature and her patterns & equations, science and outlandish predictions based on mathematics turning out to be real, the impossibility thatis the human body...
      that can't be pointless. What's that mean for life? Idk but I know we are not in a simulation so please do dont @ me w that bullshit or flat Earth propaganda. Respect ma vibe. Lol 😎✌

    • @pcuimac
      @pcuimac Před 4 lety +1

      At last somebody who understands!

  • @kylieblair769
    @kylieblair769 Před 7 lety +13

    I've been doing research for days for a paper on this play and seriously nothing has been more of a help than this video omg thank you so much for this insightful, intelligent discussion.

  • @jaybretherton6246
    @jaybretherton6246 Před 6 lety +16

    My good friend and I performed a section of waiting for Godot for our final Higher performance and it was amazing! It was the best thing I've ever done, we got full marks, and while reading about the play I fell down a Wikipedia rabbit hole into all this absurd philosophy. It's really cool to see you talking about all these things and your interpretation is really fascinating, thank you.

    • @rg-ed5fr
      @rg-ed5fr Před 2 lety +3

      yo im performing this for a serious speech duet, any tips?

    • @jaybretherton6246
      @jaybretherton6246 Před 2 lety +2

      @@rg-ed5fr pick a reading for the character and go for it, there's a ton of room in the script so have fun!

  • @meghashreedas5920
    @meghashreedas5920 Před 3 lety +21

    The way you speak, your pronounciation, the accent everything. Oh My God..!!! You as a speaker is simply awesome. Can't get over your style of speech.
    Second thing, you literally just made, waiting for godot my favourite from "the least interested category".
    Thanks a lot.

    • @zootsoot2006
      @zootsoot2006 Před rokem +1

      It's called an English accent. How English is supposed to be spoken, unless you've had a Guinness or two.

  • @dyslexicbibliophile237
    @dyslexicbibliophile237 Před 7 lety +42

    Hi Olly
    I saw Waiting for Godot in 2013 performed by the Sydney Theatre Company with Hugo Weaving and Richard Roxburgh as Vladimir & Estragon.
    I went into the play not aware of the Absurdist interpretation and came out with what seemed like an entirely different experience than the rest of the audience. The most striking scene for me was Lucky’s speaking scene. While everyone around me was laughing I was more horrified than I’d ever been in a theatre at the shear degradation of the human spirit I was witnessing. I saw a once fulfilled, well spoken individual reduced to a mere puppet, barking on command.
    I was struck by the similarities between Lucky and the Jewish folktale of the Golem. In the tale a creature is bought to life to serve the will of man until man grows scared of his creation and destroys it. A golems only form of protest is to perform a task ad absurdum when instructions aren’t specified clearly (e.g dig a well a mile deep, turn an entire forest into table legs, etc.)
    In some versions of the myth the golem is inscribed with the word emet (meaning truth) to bring it to life and has the character aleph removed leaving met (meaning death) to destroy it. I saw clear parallels between this and Lucky’s hat which when placed on his head allows him to “think” for the other characters entertainment and when this scares the characters they wrench the hat off his head mid-sentence “killing” him.

    • @ahoward4878
      @ahoward4878 Před 5 lety +2

      Interesting analysis. I have often wondered if all the characters shouldn't be wearing the striped clothing of concentration camp victims/survivors/detainees. I can't help but think that absurdist philosophy is turned into nihilism in the plays of Beckett. The date of the creation of this work means that the horror stories of the camps (& those from Stalinist Russia)--in addition to the degradations suffered by the French during the Occupation--must have informed Beckett's creation. To my eyes, these characters are man stripped bare. All the world--including its philosophers and artists--must have suffered a severe self-doubt after hearing and comprehending the full horrors of WWII.

    • @cruellasdog
      @cruellasdog Před rokem

      I'm autistic and I do the same thing ;) seriously though this is such a good interpretation

  • @michaelhand8771
    @michaelhand8771 Před 7 lety +408

    I'm Godot, I have arrived.

    • @michaelhand8771
      @michaelhand8771 Před 7 lety +8

      Beezletoad You have passed the test, good sir. It is not Michael Hand, it is I, Godot.

    • @wyattcastle7225
      @wyattcastle7225 Před 7 lety +12

      Michael Hand
      objection!!!!

    • @dominic9983
      @dominic9983 Před 7 lety +5

      Thank goodness, I've been waiting!

    • @goldigit
      @goldigit Před 6 lety +3

      Get your hand off it, Michael.

    • @matthewmalpeli
      @matthewmalpeli Před 6 lety +3

      It's an invisible hand so it knows the position it must be in to enable Godart to arrive. Its better that way. At least then you don't know where it's been

  • @astrathefawn4796
    @astrathefawn4796 Před 7 lety +57

    Huge props on your French, my friend~ As a French speaker, I couldn't be more pleased with your efforts

  • @jessecanada14
    @jessecanada14 Před 7 lety +21

    Very insightful video! I studied Beckett's play this semester in English, but never thought knew about the historical context and how it connects so well with Camus's philosophy. Good job!

  • @dadavismo4881
    @dadavismo4881 Před 4 lety +9

    I have an exam in like 37 minutes about this is so helpful, thank you so much

    • @rg-ed5fr
      @rg-ed5fr Před 2 lety

      how’d it go

    • @dadavismo4881
      @dadavismo4881 Před 2 lety

      @@rg-ed5fr iirc i got an 8 or so, so pretty fine!

  • @borzoomoazami8201
    @borzoomoazami8201 Před 5 lety +1

    Amaaaaaaaazing. Im extremely shocked by your description and I'm sooo impressed, you helped me to love this play a lot more. Thanks.

  • @paulvandijck6476
    @paulvandijck6476 Před 7 lety +56

    I enjoyed your enthusiasm.

  • @wolfbenson
    @wolfbenson Před rokem +1

    Excellent and thought provoking. I never thought of that comparison nor the other conclusions you drew. Great!

  • @darkaliebaba99
    @darkaliebaba99 Před 7 lety +11

    If anyone is in the acceptance state it is Vladimir. In act II he bit by bit starts realising that he is stuck in this repeating loop. And he doesnt go away, he doesn't try to follow the boy or anything. He just... keeps going... I guess.

  • @Chaitaliiyy
    @Chaitaliiyy Před 4 lety +1

    Lot of thanks! I've enjoyed your enthusiastic comparison between myth of Sisyphus and waiting for Godot. Love love. It helped a lot for making my notes on it.

  • @theotherpen15
    @theotherpen15 Před 7 lety +63

    Albert Camus #7 response is the same thing buddha said millenia ago

  • @horrorboyproductions
    @horrorboyproductions Před 4 lety

    Awesome video! As I'm reading "Waiting for Godot" for a play analysis class at my university, I really appreciated this.

  • @drinkclintons2058
    @drinkclintons2058 Před měsícem

    I thoroughly enjoyed your breakdown and background. Well done.

  • @pavlovaisgood1314
    @pavlovaisgood1314 Před 7 lety +3

    Thought in a very clear and concise manner. Extremely helpful. Thank you!!!

  • @Urspo
    @Urspo Před 3 lety

    whenever I need courage to continue your lecture's points keeps me going.

  • @emremerakl2200
    @emremerakl2200 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for this video. This play came up in one of my literature classes in college, but it wasn't handled by the lecturer as well as it was by you. I never knew that this was something that is connected to concepts that I am deeply interested in and if I hadn't seen your video, waiting for godot would be staying in that "boring and unnecessary information" shelf in my mind. Instead now, I want to go watch it . Thank you.

  • @sponge917
    @sponge917 Před 6 lety +121

    So this video is rather old at this point but AUGH I had forgotten about Camus since I read him in college, and I had to pause the video about halfway through and go on a rant to myself alone in my apartment.
    I personally found Camus insufferable because he fails (in my view) to describe how accepting the absurd is actually a different way of life than those six methods you listed, which in practice means he completely fails to escape denial/distraction/creation/politics/etc, let alone explaining how anyone else could. Because, okay, you accept the absurd, but now what do you do with your life? Aren't you basically going to continue to choose a mixture of those six options regardless? I never really understood what acceptance of the absurd looks like in practice and how it's different from another way of life. Like, in the context of your interpretation of Waiting for Godot, should Vladimir and Estragon becomes slaves to Pozzo? Would that be the best way for them to embrace the absurd? Because they are clearly not leading fulfilling lives as it is, and if the play has any idea that resonates most clearly with an audience that seems to be the main one - that its characters are miserable due to their own inability to create or find meaning.
    I studied theater and work in theater, and the most interesting insight I know of about Waiting for Godot was this: After a semester of reading a whole variety of plays, we were tasked with writing our own in small groups. One group visited the student center and simply transcribed the interactions they heard. The question was, what style of "realist" playwright would the conversation they recorded most resemble? Surprisingly, it wasn't any realist playwright, but rather Beckett's absurdism, that the transcribed dialogue most resembled.
    It seems to me like this school of thought comes to the conclusion that deciding to be happy despite a miserable life is the only solution, but is unable to provide any actual means of which to find that source of happiness through willpower. Strikes me kind of like a depressed person saying "there's no meaning to anything so I must choose to be happy" and attempting to force themselves to cheer up. But speaking as someone who struggles with depression, well, that simply doesn't work. You cannot just choose to be happy when you're not, or we wouldn't have a problem in the first place.

    • @foobar3115
      @foobar3115 Před 5 lety +33

      My latest understanding is that it's not about what you do but the attitude with which you do it. If you practise a religion because you genuinely believe it to provide meaning you are denying the absurdity of the universe, but if you accept that absurdity and choose to continue practising anyway you are doing so not because it provides meaning but for other reasons (perhaps you enjoy the community aspects or find the rituals to be relaxing).
      That's not to say that after discovering the absurd you must simply return to what you were doing before but with a new attitude. Sisyphus only had a mountain and a rock with which to fill his existence whereas most of us have significantly more than that (depending on our various privileges).

    • @peachskull
      @peachskull Před 5 lety +13

      I'm not a big philosophy person myself but I would say that acceptance and the other 6 are not mutually exclusive - simply accepting is enough in an absurd world, the rest is whatever you make of it.

    • @prestong.6391
      @prestong.6391 Před 4 lety

      He's a self righteous tart

    • @ethanfisher-perez9620
      @ethanfisher-perez9620 Před 3 lety +12

      I think Depression is an entirely different ball game: it's a biological set point of happiness inflicted on someone, and it's very low. I got the impression from Camus that by studying philosophy and by wrangling with our own thoughts regarding how we should live, we all come to one place. We recognize that choosing to be optimistic and happy is a fine way of life, as is choosing to be pessimistic and miserable. Being rich and successful is fine, and being poor out of principle or inaction is fine. When we recognize that happiness is not inherently better than sadness, and that sadness is not inherently better than happiness, we find some wiggle room, some opportunity to choose how we'd like to be.
      That isn't to say that it's like a light switch. It's simply a feeling that one may, through their actions, change the way they think. The feeling that one can choose comes from the empowerment of getting better with a mental health issue. I have OCD, and after struggling a lot for a few years, I have gotten better, which is to say that I worry less. But I have a baffling new perspective: I worry less, but I also don't think I'm happier. And so, my conclusion is that both mental health and mental illness are fine ways to live, each with an infinite list of benefits and drawbacks. But I believe this is something that the mentally ill need to learn themselves.
      From this point, now that I've reduced anxiety, I've simply shifted to the bigger questions of how will I go on living? And I believe this is where Camus was at in his writing. Not saying that one should choose to be happy in the face of absurdity, but that by recognizing how little capable we are of doing objective good or bad in this world, we may find an empowerment we didn't always know existed.
      I know your comment is 3 years old, but I'm glad I could type lol

    • @rtothemutha
      @rtothemutha Před 3 lety

      I am convinced myself that, at the end of the day, accomplishing goals seem to be the most satisfying thing to me. WHAT I'VE STRUGGLED WITH was making reasonable goals along the way to an ultimate successful goal (I just taught myself something here as I type by the way). In the fog of "waiting to accomplish a goal", that's where those other 6 responses could certain come in and interrupt the wavelength towards those goals. That's why I'm convinced that focus, tuning-out negative folks, and making consistent self-proclamations about the success you desire MAY help towards eliminating distractions from the outside, as well as those self-destructive thoughts on the inside.
      The HOF Great Michael Irvin said that along the way to grinding along the road to the endzone for a touchdown, you must be able to complete those first-downs, and "CELEBRATE those small moments".
      Damn, what I just realized is that you even have to have a defined meaning of what a small first-down looks like in your own life, AND THEN a defined plan to reach that small first-down goal. All this en-route to achieving your ultimate goal (which gives you meaning in living).
      Hence, let me get started.....

  • @gautamabuddha24
    @gautamabuddha24 Před 7 lety +6

    This is awesome! Thank you so much for posting this video.

  • @varoujanfroundjian4898

    Extremely helpful. I had never thought incorporating philosophy into the play. But it perfectly makes sense. Thank you so much.

  • @chris.dalton
    @chris.dalton Před 7 lety

    This is a very good exploration of the philosophy of the play. I've watched it a number of times on film, and twice at the theatre (the first with Max Wall), and each time it reveals itself more fully. And I think you have it spot on.

  • @eaniracate
    @eaniracate Před 4 lety

    I really appreciate this video because for my theatre history class I have to write an absurdist play and this video gave me so many ideas. Great vid!

  • @sunitamukhi3462
    @sunitamukhi3462 Před 3 lety +4

    This is brilliant! Makes me LOVE Godot and the absurd even more. Plus he's lovely to hear and look at.

  • @KillaGthug4life
    @KillaGthug4life Před 7 lety +2

    This was really well done and well spoken. Great evidence and reasoning.

  • @karlekdahl2409
    @karlekdahl2409 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank for a most wonderful lecture! Im an director from Sweden. Worked with Becketts plays for long time. Never came across any anyone who could nail it like you. Most helpful.

    • @PhilosophyTube
      @PhilosophyTube  Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks! Let me know if you're casting anything in London, haha!

  • @biglydia1105
    @biglydia1105 Před 3 měsíci

    Amazing explanation, so much food for thought!
    Thank you😊

  • @tessapiotrowskikristensen8058

    I really enjoy your discussions; thank your for presenting.

  • @quentinedit5157
    @quentinedit5157 Před 6 lety +1

    Very interesting analysis, You've really enlighted me on this play!

  • @snehaguha6396
    @snehaguha6396 Před 2 lety

    This guy just explained what I was looking for!!! I've a test on this play after two days & this helped me a loooottttt!!
    Thank you❤🌻

  • @MakingaStink
    @MakingaStink Před 3 měsíci

    Fantastic analysis and explanation! Thank you!

  • @nazmulgani3776
    @nazmulgani3776 Před rokem

    Excellent!!! Superb!!! None else has ever explained or can explain so easily, correctly, lucidly The Theatre of the ABSURD and the Philosophy concerned......................look forward to hearing more analytical discussions from you...........

  • @steeleye2112
    @steeleye2112 Před 5 lety

    Spot on, I think large elements of what you describe is exactly what Beckett was attempting to portray. Also you have a knack for explanation that exceeds many more famous critics.

  • @sherifamr2297
    @sherifamr2297 Před 7 lety +2

    Wow man, that's a good video .. keep it up with the philosophy man, one love

  • @HartlandOrchard
    @HartlandOrchard Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much for making this!

  • @coj6
    @coj6 Před 3 lety

    thank you! amazing angle of looking at the work!

  • @emmelinasmit85
    @emmelinasmit85 Před 5 lety

    Thank you!! Loved it!! Need it for my gr12 Drama students and you are ticking all the boxes!

  • @Monster_Mover_Stocks
    @Monster_Mover_Stocks Před 7 lety +514

    8. Show your bilingual ability on CZcams by speaking French

    • @edgara3949
      @edgara3949 Před 7 lety +7

      He doesn't need to list all "career choices" because in this Philosophy life is absurd and nothing ever can feel the void. Humans try all sorts of diversions to not look into the void directly but its still there and our compulsion in doing stuff and getting somewhere every day of our lives is the way we do it. Accepting this reality, this Absurd, is Camus' way of dealing with the Absurd. I think that Accepting or Not Accepting the absurd is equally pointless.

    • @edgara3949
      @edgara3949 Před 7 lety +10

      you still don't get it

    • @sourabh05
      @sourabh05 Před 7 lety +4

      hey sammy2629.. look what I found!!! there's a stick up your ass

    • @Kwonghun
      @Kwonghun Před 7 lety +18

      And his pronunciation is horrible... Why can't any f*ckin' Englishman or American pronounce a trilled or an uvular R?? This really pisses me off more than it should.

    • @beckymckee6929
      @beckymckee6929 Před 7 lety +34

      It's because native English speakers do not have that sound in their own language, and the ability to produce that sound is lost in early childhood with the development of English speech. I suggest you look into a basic linguistics class to cure you of irritation with speakers of other languages who study for years to speak French but are unable to speak like a native, because they ARE NOT NATIVE FRENCH SPEAKERS.

  • @tabeeramjad7324
    @tabeeramjad7324 Před 5 lety

    Amazing video, thanks for sharing such worthy information! 😊

  • @AngryNewAger
    @AngryNewAger Před 5 lety

    Excellent analysis. I really enjoyed your presentation

  • @tushitajolly263
    @tushitajolly263 Před 7 lety

    I have never had someone explain waiting to godot un such a manner. Its lovely😊 thank you

  • @IGM50
    @IGM50 Před 7 lety +2

    You're so god at explaining it with so much fun man! Congrats for your enthusiasm and good luck with you drama career! ;) Greetings from Spain.

  • @franciscafarfallina
    @franciscafarfallina Před 6 lety +1

    A very entertaining lively And truthful explanation, with the parallel comparison Camus, of Godot...totally agree, an artistical manner of expression plus the bonds we make with other fellow humans gives meaningfulness in this whole absurdity that we are nonetheless "lucky" to Live....living Life well seasoned with humour, taking ones work but not ourselves seriously is what can make us most happy...That's indeed what Beckett but also Prévert or Quéneau for example showed us too.....thanks again fellow resilient philosophizing artist

  • @maartenh94
    @maartenh94 Před 7 lety

    I like how your education to be an actor has influenced your videos so much. It is nice to see you trying new things and getting more creative with your online lectures. The french talking part was, for me personally, a bit too much, but that is just me.
    However, I must say I do miss the oldfashioned introduction to a philosophical idea, like you used to make them. Those videos were a major reason for choosing philosophy for my current education.

  • @shelleywinters6763
    @shelleywinters6763 Před 2 měsíci

    when you were speaking in French I was reading the french text and translating it in my head into english LOL.
    I did a paper on this play, because I read it, then I started studying philosophy, came back to the play to do the paper and realised there were all these philosophy jokes in it and there are also religious jokes too. I didn't get introduced to philosophy of the absurd sadly, so I didn't see the connection. Camus is definately someone I should read up on.
    Really clear summing up of the play. Thanks

  • @faithaxford4780
    @faithaxford4780 Před 2 lety

    This has literally helped me so much for multiple English assessments and my exams thankyou so much !

  • @leonorsr4421
    @leonorsr4421 Před rokem

    incredible video! I've got a presentation on this next week and the video helped immensely :)

  • @simsalabim7627
    @simsalabim7627 Před 7 lety +3

    Well, you convinced me to buy and read this book/play. I like your channel and think that you are doing a great job!

    • @colehartel7206
      @colehartel7206 Před 5 lety

      Plays are not written to be read. You should see it performed.

  • @pgfromfiji
    @pgfromfiji Před 3 lety

    Damn good job mate!! recommended your channel to my mates in Fiji Islands!!

  • @noorbella5060
    @noorbella5060 Před 5 lety

    Wow!that was an excellent analysis. Thanks a lot. Great job

  • @MathewHeggem
    @MathewHeggem Před 5 lety

    Thank you for that explanation. Very insightful. Appreciate it!

  • @TaylorjAdams
    @TaylorjAdams Před 7 lety +49

    Was totally not interested at all in waiting for Godot. Is now near the top of my to watch list. Thank you muchly.

    • @PhilosophyTube
      @PhilosophyTube  Před 7 lety +7

      +Taylor Adams hah, awesome!

    • @colehartel7206
      @colehartel7206 Před 5 lety

      And when we get there the Irish in me is going to claim it for France!

  • @evelinbusetto
    @evelinbusetto Před 5 lety

    Thank you very much, I'm going to use this video on Monday morning with my class in high school. Je sais déjà qu'ils vont adorer!

  • @nicole-secondaryemail-mort9617

    Thank you, great mini-lecture.

  • @zacwansey8758
    @zacwansey8758 Před 6 lety

    dude, im doing a comparative text study in extension english, you have no idea how bloody helpful this vid was

  • @LordSandwich97
    @LordSandwich97 Před 7 lety

    I really loved this video. In our last year of secondary school, we read the play by having some classmates 'perform' it without ever having read it themselves, just reading the script out loud and attempting some form of acting. It made it both hilarious and maybe even more absurd, and I still think of the particular classmates that played a particular character when reading it.

  • @mattsheppard7014
    @mattsheppard7014 Před 6 lety +14

    The whole time I studied this in high school, I was worried I wasn’t “getting it”. Glad to see that my crazed ramblings were based in actual philosophy. If only I found this video before my final exam.

  • @temaalyanoglu6394
    @temaalyanoglu6394 Před rokem

    amazing . thank you very much for this wonderful , clear and concise explanation .

  • @kanijfaria2833
    @kanijfaria2833 Před 3 lety

    It has been very useful. Thank you very much❤️

  • @Notethos
    @Notethos Před 7 lety

    this was great! I didn’t learn anything new, but that's okay, the theatre of the absurd had a strong influence on me. what would be amazing would be if you could do more videos like this. I like genet and ionesco a lot too. thank you for this video

  • @benscraftymusings
    @benscraftymusings Před 6 lety

    Thanks for sharing that, I found it really helpful after having watched the play.

  • @kurttaylor5445
    @kurttaylor5445 Před 7 lety

    The production at Spoleto 2017 is absolutely first-class. I have served as a house manager for 34 years for the festival, and this production is in my top three plays during that time.

  • @edoardogribaldo2870
    @edoardogribaldo2870 Před 3 lety

    Great video, compliments!

  • @sneakykilla12
    @sneakykilla12 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for this! Very insightful. Helped me with my English notes :D

  • @Alex-vp6yw
    @Alex-vp6yw Před 7 lety +1

    Really fine analysis, thank you!

  • @Nobody21butme
    @Nobody21butme Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much I really needed this .

  • @osito9810
    @osito9810 Před rokem

    What a great video, thanks for sharing the knowledge

  • @ErikratKhandnalie
    @ErikratKhandnalie Před 7 lety +8

    I think that the optimal response to the Absurd is not merely acceptance, but rather the combination of acceptance and denial. Life is a pointless task in the end, this is true, and should be accepted as reality. However, this acceptance does not actually assist one in pursuing the task of life. Towards that end, denial is quite clearly the most beneficial solution - How can one get anything done in life, when it is seen only as a burden? Even if one imagines Sisyphus happy, that does not necessarily mean that they too can be happy when confronted with the Absurd. It is a monumental act of willpower which is at once impressive, being reminiscent of the qualities attributed to Nietsche's Overman, and yet also daft and inefficient. It is far easier to simultaneously hold two contradicting truths than it is to gladly hold true the certainty of one's own despair. Accept the Absurd nature of life, but also adamantly deny it, and turn oneself towards whatever meaning helps one best deal with life's lack of meaning.

    • @skyswirl8531
      @skyswirl8531 Před 4 lety

      wow this is beautifully written. well said

    • @HalfLifeDecay
      @HalfLifeDecay Před 3 lety

      Idk man i think im fine with just acceptance, rip to you but I'm different

    • @LounaM11
      @LounaM11 Před 3 lety

      That is Camus' whole argument. The absurd is a product of the conflict between human desire for meaning and a meaningless universe. If you accept that the universe is meaningless and completely deny a search for meaning, the absurd falls apart. If you convince yourself that life has a meaning, the absurd falls apart. The absurd cannot exist without both of them, so both must be accepted (if you want to live authentically).

  • @SkySawVideo
    @SkySawVideo Před 5 lety

    Thank you, Olly, this is very good. I will show it. Put Camus in the title, and thank you, again, for the compelling summary of that masterwork.

  • @somewony
    @somewony Před 7 lety +1

    I've always considered Waiting for Godot to be an early work of ASMR. I'm personally very relaxed every time I watch it.

  • @nunosilva6574
    @nunosilva6574 Před 7 lety +1

    I'd like to thank you for helping me understand this play. I watched your video just before watching the play (probably a mistake if I wanted to form my own opinions, but at least I wasn't hopelessly confused) and I don't think I would have understood anything without.

  •  Před 2 měsíci

    Absolutely beautiful explanation thank you!

  • @wazzzzifah840
    @wazzzzifah840 Před 7 lety

    I've gotta an exam tomorrow and u seriously helped me a lot dude. Amazing perspective! 👍

  • @bubbleboy2590
    @bubbleboy2590 Před 5 lety +1

    Mr PeanutButter as Camus' interpretation of the absurdist hero go go go

  • @obino158
    @obino158 Před 7 lety

    This video really helped me! Thanks mate!

  • @dragoncurveenthusiast
    @dragoncurveenthusiast Před 6 lety

    I'm going to start reading this book soon. I think this will help me a lot in understanding and hopefully appreciating the book.
    Also: subbed!

  • @dr.apjayaraman4556
    @dr.apjayaraman4556 Před 7 lety

    Insightful analysis of the play. Crystalline exposition of the philosophy. Positioning Lucky as icon of Absurdism with firm foundation. A must for every Professor of Literature. Simply delightful.

  • @figsandoranges
    @figsandoranges Před 2 lety +1

    Had to watch this for a class, love it

  • @ChristiamV
    @ChristiamV Před 4 lety

    Nice video man, thanks for that

  • @alexnikonov8070
    @alexnikonov8070 Před 3 lety

    Absolutely brilliant explanation. Bravo!

  • @ndjubilant8391
    @ndjubilant8391 Před 5 lety

    This is very well explained, thank you.

  • @preranadeka9126
    @preranadeka9126 Před 2 lety

    Beautifully explained!!

  • @leilaghasempor5558
    @leilaghasempor5558 Před 6 lety

    Amazing explanations. Thank you!

  • @guywhocantgrowabeard
    @guywhocantgrowabeard Před 4 lety +2

    This helped me understand Godot a bit better, thanks! I've read Camus separately but I didn't make the connection between the two.

    • @zootsoot2006
      @zootsoot2006 Před rokem

      There's surely the time element too. God has already appeared and yet they're still waiting for Him.

  • @abhishekphand4789
    @abhishekphand4789 Před 7 lety

    you just made my day by this explanation

  • @feliperamos3313
    @feliperamos3313 Před 4 lety

    Thank you, you just gave me something to think about. I wish now someday I can watch Waiting for Godot.

  • @CDeruiter5963
    @CDeruiter5963 Před 7 lety +8

    This is a Wonderful Video! Thank you for taking the time to make it! I have two questions for you though: 1) IF history had played out differently, would Camus' choice of response to the absurd have changed? 2) What role does choice have in responses to the absurd? You say that Lucky, in "Waiting for Godot" is an ideal candidate for Camus' version of Acceptance by willingly continuing to live on in spite of absurdity. But in being a slave, what choice does he have?

    • @Operafreak9
      @Operafreak9 Před 2 lety +1

      I think his choice is the same as that expressed by Viktor Frankl in " Man's Search for Meaning,"in describing his concentration experience. He said the Nazis could take everything from him except his attitude, that is he could choose resentment or acceptance, and so on. The Nazis had no control over his spirit.

  • @7orqu3
    @7orqu3 Před 7 lety

    I could watch him do these all day

  • @paulwebsterantiques8321
    @paulwebsterantiques8321 Před 6 lety +1

    Great explanation.. Only watching the play, (and never having read it) in my late 40's... I was wondering what all the fuss was about.... so I thought ... hey, give it a go. I'd kind of gotten the gist to an extent that meant I was thinking about what was going on and how things were interacting and loved it, and I'd have to say that your appraisal clarified some points I was, to say the least, a little fuzzy or undecided on... there are as I understand many interpretations of the work, but.... I'd say I would be happy to count this as a pretty damn good one..... plus you qualified your credibility as an actor, by mentioning in the patreon plea "for rent and food' or words to those effects :)
    Well done and thank you for helping a rapidly ageing old fart (I'm usually a life-sized Victor Meldrew!!) to become more excited and enthusiastic about such work.

  • @Elisa-wn2yl
    @Elisa-wn2yl Před 3 lety

    thank you! this video was immensely helpful :)

  • @ELCHOCHOLOCO420
    @ELCHOCHOLOCO420 Před 5 lety

    Best video explain of waiting for Godot, thanks man !

  • @theeaudacity2648
    @theeaudacity2648 Před 7 lety

    Thanks! You really helped with my homework!

  • @saidinour7505
    @saidinour7505 Před 7 lety +1

    thank you very much