The Seagull Analysis

Literary Devices in The Seagull

Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory

Setting

Chekhov doesn't tell us exactly where Sorin's farm is located in Russia, but we can assume (according to translator Paul Schmidt) that it resembles the estate Chekhov bought in 1891. It was fifty m...

Genre

Tragedy. Tragedy. Crazy crazy ultra-sad, hero-loses-it-all, love-is-dead tragedy.Even though Medvedenko misuses words to comic effect, and Sorin has silly verbal tics, this play is bleaksauce. Alth...

Tone

Chekhov views all his characters with a half-smirk—a mixture of compassion and ridicule—and we really have to choice but to do the same. We admire Konstantin's idealism and honesty, but man-oh-...

Writing Style

Chekhov believed that theater should reflect life. "What happens onstage should be just as complicated and just as simple as things are in real life. People are sitting at a table having dinner, th...

What's Up With the Title?

As you might guess, the seagull is an important symbol that recurs throughout Chekhov's play, The Seagull. No huge shocker there. Nina calls herself a seagull. Konstantin shoots one and leaves it l...

What's Up With the Ending?

There's no hoopla at the end of The Seagull. After the unhurried pace of the rest of the play the ending—with just four lines after the gunshot—almost feels rushed. Konstantin has killed himsel...

Tough-o-Meter

The Seagull isn't hard to read. There might be some moments where the plot (or lack thereof) gets a little fuzzy, but the language is relatively straightforward and the characters are people we can...

Plot Analysis

The family is gathered at Sorin's estate for the summer. Konstantin's premiering his play; it stars his love interest, Nina. At this point, it's all about possibility. Maybe Arkadina will love the...

Booker's Seven Basic Plots Analysis

Chekhov was a weird dude, always insisting that his plays are comedies. Bro, your protagonist shoots himself at the end. In this stage, Booker says the hero is in some way incomplete and foc...

Three-Act Plot Analysis

No, you're not crazy. The Seagull is in four acts. This Three-Act structure is just another way of breaking down the events in the play."Act 1" encompasses Chekhov's Act 1 and part of Act 2, up unt...

Trivia

The famous actor, director and theoretician Constantin Stanislavsky played Trigorin in the Moscow Art Theater revival. (Source)The American short story writer Raymond Carver was deeply influenced b...

Steaminess Rating

There's a lot of implied sex, good and bad, marital and illicit, in The Seagull. But like most of the super dramatic moments in his plays (Konstantin's suicide, Nina's baby dying) Chekhov doesn't s...

Allusions

Eleanora Duse (1.25) – super famous Italian actress who would have been Arkadina's contemporary.Camille (1.25) – 1852 melodrama by Alexandre Dumas, fils ("fils" meaning, son of Alexandre Dumas,...