Β Our relationship to the octopus dates back to prehistory, when the eight-armed animal was depicted on vases and found in stone carvings from ancient Greece. Now we appreciate them for their abilities as escape artists, with sophisticated camouflage systems and ink jetsβas well as their roles in tas
Octopus
β Scribed by Afsaneh Gray
- Publisher
- Oberon Books
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 64
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
βYouβre an octopus. All mixed up, like me. One leg something, and one leg something else.β As far as Sarah, Sara and Scheherazade are concerned, they have nothing in common. And yet theyβve all been called in for an interview to determine how British they are: a new requirement for those with βnon-indigenous heritageβ. Sara looks kind of Asian. Scheherazade looks kind of Middle Eastern. And Sarah is kind of white and has no idea why sheβs here. She also keeps bursting into song. But by the end of the play it becomes clear that the three women are all what Scheherazade thinks of as βoctopusesβ β mixed race and mixed up with it. And maybe thatβs true of Britishness too. Octopus takes a satirical look at what it means to be British, how it feels to be treated as a foreigner in your own land, and the power of punk.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<div><p>The octopus is generally acknowledged to be the most intelligent invertebrate in the world: according to marine biologists the common octopus (Octopus vulgaris) has a mental capacity comparable with that of a dog. If you look at an octopus the octopus will look back at you, and actually thin
<p>Our relationship to the octopus dates back to prehistory, when the eight-armed animal was depicted on vases and found in stone carvings from ancient Greece. Now we appreciate them for their abilities as escape artists, with sophisticated camouflage systems and ink jets—as well as their role
Β Our relationship to the octopus dates back to prehistory, when the eight-armed animal was depicted on vases and found in stone carvings from ancient Greece. Now we appreciate them for their abilities as escape artists, with sophisticated camouflage systems and ink jetsβas well as their roles in tas