In the 1960s, mass consumerism and its resulting hippie movement flourished, intertwined with contradictions. Those who seem to be beautiful can't get out of the city wall they built, and those who seem to be wild are actually depressed and passive. It is not easy for everyone, trying hard to gain a firm foothold in the big waves and scouring the sand, and to stabilize their social status, but they also have to look at each other on the food chain. Both suppress their desires, and sadly they can only vent in a twisted way. It's not about a Mad Men story, it's about the depression of an era.
Each play is not only an interpretation of the current plot, but also reflects various typical beliefs of this era. The low position of women is very low, and various symbolic women are more to please men, but they are also like joans who see through the rules and use their female advantages to plan smartly, but they can only live in the established system. In the show, if you don't want to be a subordinate of male power, you have to become a refined egoist. This is a better way out than other girls in the show, but isn't this also a tragedy?
I understand all the lines and mappings in the play, but I am sad to understand it myself. It is really a real world.
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