These Shining Lives Analysis

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The play, These Shining Lives by Melanie Marnich can be summed up just as the main character, Catherine entails. It is “not a fairy tale, though it starts like one, and it is not a tragedy, though it ends like one” (Scene 1, p. 9). Truly, this is an accurate depiction of what the author intended to convey to her audience. It is remarkable how the author was able to twist and spins the words to form the messages she desired. Be that as it may, not everything is splayed across the ink bound pages as precisely as the stars littering the night sky.
In all honesty, at this point in the space time continuum, I cannot even begin to fathom a precise explanation how the lines in Scene one and Scene 20 precisely contribute to Marnich’s play. Yet, I do believe there are numerous lurking messages within the text; given the fact that no author pens void words on a page. For one, the lines “we hear the ticking of a clock, the ticking becomes a heartbeat, for a few beats, then it stops. There is a god made of time, a devil made of time, and angels, miracles and sins, all made of hours” (Scene 20, p. 65). This does certainly pose a contrast to what Catherine describes at the beginning of the book “they say you see your life flash before your eyes, that you see a …show more content…

Granted that Catherine “won her case six times, for the Radium Dial Company appealed six times. After losing all six, the company appealed one last to the United States Supreme Courrt and finally the Illinois Industrial Commission awarded Catherine five thousand, six hundred, and sixty-one dollars” (Scene 20, p. 65). This case probably shed a new light to the countless of workers who probably had been affected by the radium. Moreover, assuming that the company eventually went bankrupt, it is not a stretch to say that injustice transformed to justice. Even if only by some measurable degree; by some tick of

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