MORALITY AND POLITICS IN TOM STOPPARD
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Abstract (Original Language):
This paper argues how Tom Stoppard reflects his moral and political concerns in
his plays. Stoppard is a moral writer and opposes any political idea rejecting morality,
particularly under the name of modernity. Nevertheless, he is not a political writer and his
power of comedy suppresses his ideological criticism. He is a man of universal writing
avoiding daily and would-be out of date news.
Though the playwright seems to favour conservative beliefs and ideas, in his plays,
personal choices are preferred to a morality imposed by the laws or legislations because he
believes that there cannot be fixed moral realities. He has proved to be a man of human
rights both with his thoughts and actions. His criticism of Marxism and Leninism is a clear
evidence of it. While tolerating the mistaken ideas of artists, he does not show the slightest
sympathy for the political oppressors.
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