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Rules of the Game 3077 Views
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Description:
When you think about it, chess could be a metaphor for just about anything, really.
Transcript
- 00:05
Rules of the Game, a la Shmoop. Any chess players out there?
- 00:10
And if you merely wage battles between the little horsies and the tiny castles while
- 00:15
you're soaking in the bathtub... it doesn't count.
- 00:18
We're talking... chess the way it was intended to be played.
- 00:22
Arguably the greatest test of a game-player's skill.
Full Transcript
- 00:25
Mano a mano.
- 00:27
Little horsie a little horsie. Amy Tan, author of Rules of the Game, a chapter
- 00:33
of her book, The Joy Luck Club...
- 00:35
...understood how chess could be used as a metaphor to represent life's greatest battles.
- 00:40
There are many obvious parallels... advancing along a path... encountering and tackling
- 00:46
obstacles... promoting oneself and gaining power...
- 00:49
...and, if your destructive little brother is around... the capricious uncertainty of
- 01:00
our future. She doesn't attempt to hide the fact that,
- 01:04
while focusing literally on chess in the story...
- 01:07
...she also wants it to tell us something about her protagonist's journey.
- 01:11
The question? What is she using chess to represent? Waverly learns from her mother that she must
- 01:19
work very hard if she ever wants to accomplish anything in life...
- 01:23
...considering the gender stereotypes and restrictions placed on her by society.
- 01:28
Is this where the chess metaphor comes into play?
- 01:31
Chess isn't one of those games you can just pull out of the box and master in a matter
- 01:34
of minutes.
- 01:35
It takes years of intense practice and study to become truly skilled at chess...
- 01:40
...especially if one wishes to become a "Chess Grandmaster."
- 01:44
It looks really impressive on a business card... trust us.
- 01:48
So is Tan suggesting that we need to apply the same work ethic in life...
- 01:52
... that we would apply if we're trying to become a chess wiz?
- 01:55
Or is it more about the game play itself?
- 02:00
In the game of chess, you are continually in the line of fire.
- 02:07
There are pieces that can attack from all sides and at any time, and you always have
- 02:11
to think four or five moves ahead to avoid capture.
- 02:14
Waverly realized she needed to approach real life in much the same way.
- 02:19
She learned that her path would not always be easy, and that if your parents give you
- 02:24
Lifesavers for Christmas...
- 02:26
...you need to find some way to make... Lifesaver-ade. Then again, maybe it's simply about rules.
- 02:32
Chess has some pretty stringent ones... bishops must always move diagonally, rooks backwards
- 02:38
and forwards or side to side, and knights must always move in an "L" shape... in honor
- 02:43
of Lancelot, perhaps?
- 02:46
Waverly is subjected to the world's rules as well. Namely... that men are granted the
- 02:51
favorable opportunities, while women are expected to take a back seat...
- 02:55
...and busy themselves in the kitchen. However, while Waverly is content to follow
- 03:00
all of the rules of the game she loves...
- 03:02
...she is not so eager and willing to roll over and abide by her culture's antiquated
- 03:06
guidelines. So what did Chess represent?
- 03:10
A treatise on the importance of hard work?
- 03:13
An allegory for dealing with life's many obstacles?
- 03:17
Or a comparison between the rules of a board game... and the rules of the world?
- 03:22
And while you're thinking about that... Knight to F3. Check. Your move.
- 03:26
Now... Shmoop amongst yourselves.
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