In the play, Brecht utilizes narrative, irony, the juxtaposition of self-proclaimed "truths" to reveal their flaws, the concretizing of complex ideas into dramatic events, an understanding and simple presentation of human behaviour, and a comedic
optimism that things can be changed and that reason and common sense will overcome fear and
superstition. Vlassov is Brecht's entirely positive major character, who endures a long and difficult road to liberation.
The Mother is Brecht's most elaborate use of his radically experimental
Lehrstücke, or "learning plays", which he describes as "a piece of anti-
metaphysical,
materialistic,
non-Aristotelian drama." The play suggests that to become a good mother involves more than just complaining about the price of soup; rather, one must struggle against it, not only for her and her family's sake, but for the sake of all working families. The title character, the mother Pelagea Vlassova, journeys through the play's fourteen scenes, the death of her son, and her own impending illness, fighting illiteracy while constantly filled with good humor and wily
activism. The moment in
October 1917 when she becomes free to carry and raise her own
Red Flag on the eve of the czar's overthrow proves momentous. The play has garnered continued recognition for its forensic, witty and, some would say,
humanist critique of
capitalism seen through the experiences of those obliged, as Brecht saw it, to live beneath that system's crushing weight. ==References==