The Cultural
Conflict, Independence and Social Changes as the Basic Themes of the Play
Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard projects
the cultural conflict of the turn of the twentieth century of Russia. With a
historical allusion, Chekhov exhibited the changing Russia with "slice
of life" in his play. The Cherry Orchard is not only a depiction of
Russian life but also an understatement of changing traditional value. Cultural
conflict itself is an abstraction. To explain it, it is the traditional culture
that is unable to resist the invading one.
In the play, each character has his or her
own personality, which symbolizes the individual social levels of Russian
society. But these characters distinguish themselves into two sides, which are
conservators and investors; therefore, they conflict each other in opinion. The
following developments will begin with an outlook of ‘The Cherry Orchard’ to
acknowledge the basic concept of the play. The second part is culture in change
that explains historical background of modern Russia. Third by a contrasting
method, the main idea of this part is an illustration of conflict.
The play deals with the theme of independence
in many different ways. Fundamentally, it demands that we ask what it is to be
free. What with the Liberation, The Cherry Orchard deals with independence in a
very concrete way: shortly before the beginning of the play, much of Russia's
population was not free. The play's characters demonstrate the different
degrees of freedom that result from the Liberation. On opposing ends of this
question are Lopakhin and Firs. One man has been able to take advantage of his
liberation to make himself independent; the other, although he is technically
free, has not changed his position at all and is subject to the whims of the
family he serves, as he has always been. The difference in their situation
demonstrates the observations of many Russians of the time: officially
liberating a group of people is not the same as making them free if you do not
also equip them with the tools they need to become independent, i.e., resources
such as education and land.
Trophimof, the play's idealist, offers one
definition of freedom for the audience to consider when he declines Lopakhin's
offer of money. According to Trophimof, he is a free man because he is beholden
to no one and nothing more than his own concept of morality. His observations
seem accurate in light of other forms of non-freedom in the play. Madame
Ranevsky, for example, is not free in a very different way from Firs. She has enough assets to be able to control her own destiny, but
she is a slave to her passions, spending extravagantly and making poor
decisions in romance, and therefore cannot follow a higher moral code as
Trophimof does. What with the combination of economic circumstances and the
bizarre weaknesses of the characters, the play therefore suggests that there
are two sources which control freedom and the lack thereof: economics, which
comes from without, and control over oneself, which comes from within.
Several characters address the potential
difference between social change and social progress. Firs and Trophimof are
two of them. Both question the utility of the Liberation. As Firs notes, it
made everyone happy, but they did not know what they were happy for. Firs
himself is living proof of this discrepancy: society has changed, but his life,
and the lives of countless others, have not progressed. Both characters
insinuate that the Liberation is not enough to constitute progress; while it
was a necessary change; it was not enough to bring mankind to the idealized
future Trophimof imagines. The play leaves the impression that while change has
come, there is more work to be done.
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