Themes in the play

Symbols and devices

Key quotations

Dramatic devices

Character analysis

100


What is the main theme of Death and the Maiden?



Justice vs/and revenge.


100


What does the tape recorder symbolize?



Controls the narrative and evidence of truth.


100


Finish this line: “This time I’m going to….”



think it all out very carefully.”


100


Name a dramatic technique Dorfman uses.



Our answer: tension-building through dialogue.


100


Who is Paulina Escobar?



A former political prisoner who was tortured and seeks justice.


200


Name two themes explored in the play.



Either; truth & memory or power & control.


200


How does music function symbolically?



Death and the Maiden triggers Paulina’s trauma and represents her past.


200


What does Gerardo mean when he says: “This is a country, Paulina”?



He implies that the country must move forward and can’t dwell on the past, showing his personal view on justice.


200


How does the play use monologues?



they reveal internal struggles and emphasize personal perspectives


200


How is Paulina both strong and weak?



Strong: Takes control, fights for justice. Weak: Emotionally scarred, struggles with trust.


300


How does the play explore justice vs. revenge?



Paulina seeks justice but acts in ways that resemble revenge.


300


Explain the use of light and darkness as symbols.



Light represents truth and exposure, while darkness symbolizes secrecy and repression.


300


What is the significance of the quote: “I want him to confess”?



It reveals Paulina’s need for closure and confirms her suffering.


300


Explain how Dorfman uses pacing to create suspense.



Long silences and sudden outbursts create tension, mirroring Paulina’s psychological state.


300


What does Roberto Miranda symbolize?



The ambiguity of justice—he represents both the accused oppressor and potential victim of injustice.


400


How does Dorfman use the theme of truth and memory?



By questioning whether truth is fully attainable, using unreliable narratives.


400


What does the gun symbolize in Paulina’s hands?



Power, justice, and her reclaiming agency.


400


Why is Paulina’s final silence important in the play?



It leaves ambiguity about whether she killed Roberto, reinforcing the theme of unresolved justice.


400


How does the use of an ambiguous ending serve the play’s themes?



It forces the audience to reflect on justice and whether true resolution is possible.


400


How does Gerardo act as a catalyst for change?



He bridges the political transition but also represents the compromises of post-dictatorship justice.


500


Discuss how power dynamics evolve throughout the play.



Paulina gains control over Roberto, reversing past power structures, but her authority remains fragile.


500


How does Dorfman use setting and sound to create tension?



The remote setting (of the house) isolates the characters, while sound (waves, music, silence) increases suspense.


500


How does the last scene reinforce the play’s message?



It suggests that trauma lingers despite political transitions, with unresolved tensions remaining.


500


Discuss how the play engages the audience through dramatic irony.



The audience knows Paulina’s past trauma, making Gerardo’s dismissiveness and Roberto’s denial more unsettling.


500


Discuss whether Paulina is a hero, a villain, or both.



She is a complex figure—both a victim seeking justice and someone capable of committed questionable questions. (She can be seen as both)