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The Piano. I. Introduction. 1. Brief Summary of “The Piano” 2. Social Background--Victorian Age A. Social Restrains (1) Clothes--black, (2) Hoop of skirt (3) Angel’s wings. I. Introduction (2). B. Patriarchal Society (1) Property (2) Sexuality
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I. Introduction 1. Brief Summary of “The Piano” 2. Social Background--Victorian Age A. Social Restrains (1) Clothes--black, (2) Hoop of skirt (3) Angel’s wings
I. Introduction (2) B. Patriarchal Society (1) Property (2) Sexuality 3. The Main Protagonist: Ada A. She is a mute. B. She is single but has a daughter. • C. Her arranged marriage.
II. The piano (The voice): outline • 1. Ada’s spokeswoman • 2. Intimate friend to Ada (鏡頭當Ada不能搬走鋼琴時 在山崖眺望鋼琴) • 3. The representative of Ada • 4. A medium for Baines to fall in love with AdaA. • A bargain for 80 acres (當班斯以80畝地跟史都華換取鋼琴) • B. A bargain for the teaching class (當Ada去班斯家看琴時那幕) 2. 6. The heart voice
III. The Desire • 1. The boundary between love and desire • 2. Stewart’s desire • 3. Baines’ desire
IV. The Identity of Flora • What kind of role does Flora play? (There are three processes.) • (1) She is the speaker of Ada. • (2) She is educated and taught to be a “woman”(non-phallic woman). She starts to admit the power of men. (showing the clip: Flora is forbidden by Stewart playing a game which looks like a behavior of sexual intercourse.)
IV. The Identity of Flora (2) • (3) She becomes Ada’s lecturer (as another Stewart) to blame on or punish Ada’s adultery. • 2. The angel’s wings on the back of Flora represent culture, social values and thinking on women. (showing the clip: * Flora sends the key of the piano to Stewart with the words of Ada’s love to Bains. *Flora sends Ada’s finger to Bains.)
V. Conclusion: Freedom, Music, and Feminism • 1. Escaping into freedom and out from freedom • 2. Releasing desire from music • 3. Compromising feminism with patriarchal society