Berenger, somewhat depressed, does not believe he can make such improvements but says he will try. He suggests that his friend visit museums to culture himself and notes that Berenger must make an effort to improve his situation. As they sit at a cafe in the town square, Jean attempts to help Berenger get his act together. He prides himself on the order and structure that he maintains. Jean, by contrast, is immaculately well dressed with combed hair and shiny shoes. He drinks every day, he cannot make appointments on time, and he feels as if he is drowning in the chaos of life itself. Berenger looks messy with an untucked shirt and unkempt hair. We meet Berenger and Jean, two friends whose outward appearance and inner identities contrast greatly. The play begins in a very ordinary setting with very ordinary characters. His unusual language, stylized structure, and grand symbolism define the writer's place as the premiere playwright in what is known as the Theater of the Absurd. Like the abstract artists of the early 20th century, Ionesco abstracts reality to comedic and terrifying effect. Rhinoceros is a captivating, critically acclaimed commentary on what is absurd about human nature.
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