Old Age and Regret
Anxiety about growing old or about being old is a consistent concern for many of the play’s characters. But ultimately, it seems that it’s this anxiety rather than old age itself that keeps these characters trapped in a cycle of regret. The opening scene almost immediately focuses on Astrov’s loss of youth, setting the tone for more age-related conversations that occur later in the play. Uncle Vanya himself feels as though he’s wasted his youth…
read analysis of Old Age and RegretIndustry vs. Idleness
The conflict between industry and idleness—a central focus of the play—begins when Professor Serebryakov and Yelena arrive and disrupt Voynitsky’s hardworking household—but it’s the couple’s inaction, not anything they do, that seems to throw the house into chaos. Serebryakov is retired and Yelena doesn’t work, which leaves the two of them to live idly in the house and unintentionally cause problems through their lack of focus or direction. After the couple's idleness “infects” the…
read analysis of Industry vs. IdlenessImpossible Desires
In Uncle Vanya, impossible desires and unrequited love motivate several characters to act highlighting both the folly and inevitability of chasing desires that one can never fully realize. Voynitsky—Uncle Vanya himself—best exemplifies this idea. Between his affection for Yelena, his dream of being a world-famous writer, and his painful need to rewrite his past, Voynitsky is overwhelmed by desires that he can’t fulfill. But even with his constant and inappropriate flirting with…
read analysis of Impossible DesiresLegacy and Prestige
Almost every character in Uncle Vanya has something to say about the legacy that they will (or won’t) leave behind when they’re gone. Broadly, the characters present two different ways of looking at their legacy: one way that’s helpful, and another that’s decidedly unhelpful. Characters like Voynitsky and Professor Serebryakov embody this latter, unhelpful point of view. Both men are obsessed with the legacy they leave behind, but only as it relates to their own…
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