The Play of Adam (Le Jeu d'Adam) Literary Elements

The Play of Adam (Le Jeu d'Adam) Literary Elements

Genre

Allegorical play

Language

The play was originally written in French and it was later translated in various foreign languages, including English.

Setting and Context

The action described here takes place in the distant past but the exact location is not mentioned.

Narrator and Point of View

Because this is a play, there is no narrator and no point of view. Instead, each character transmits their ideas and point of view from a subjective point of view through their direct dialogues.

Tone and Mood

The tone and mood is generally a neutral one.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Each part has a different protagonist and antagonist. For example, in the first part of the play, the protagonists are Adam and Eve and the antagonist is the serpent.

Major Conflict

The first part of the play reaches its climax when the primordial couple is punished for their actions.

Climax

The second part of the poem reaches its climax when Cain kills Able.

Foreshadowing

The negative way in which the primordial couple is portrayed in the first part of the play foreshadows the later instances in which the characters will be portrayed as disobedient.

Understatement

We have an understatement in the first part of the play when the serpent claims nothing will happen to Adam and Eve if they behave in a disobedient way. This is later proven to be an understatement when the primordial couple is punished for their actions.

Allusions

The main allusion in the play is the idea that humans have to be obedient and always listen to what is written in the Bible if they want to live a happy and meaningful life.

Imagery

One of the most important images in the play is the way in which Paradise is described in the first part of the play. This image is important because it represents complete perfection and the way God designed humans to be and the state from which humans walked away from.

Paradox

We have a paradoxical element in the second part of the play when God decides to punish Cain by banishing him rather than killing him.

Parallelism

No parallelism is present in the play.

Personification

We have a personification in the line "and the apple was calling to them".

Use of Dramatic Devices

The author uses a few dramatic devices. The most commonly found one is the stage directions used by the author to describe the context in which the action takes place. The fourth wall is also used here as a way through which the characters transmit their wisdom and their advice directly to the audience.

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