![cover image](https://wikiwandv2-19431.kxcdn.com/_next/image?url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/34/Josef_%25C4%258Capek_-_Karel_%25C4%258Capek%252C_Ze_%25C5%25BEivota_hmyzu_%2528ob%25C3%25A1lka_knihy%252C_1921%2529.jpg/640px-Josef_%25C4%258Capek_-_Karel_%25C4%258Capek%252C_Ze_%25C5%25BEivota_hmyzu_%2528ob%25C3%25A1lka_knihy%252C_1921%2529.jpg&w=640&q=50)
Pictures from the Insects' Life
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pictures from the Insects' Life (Czech: Ze života hmyzu) – also known as The Insect Play, The Life of the Insects, The Insect Comedy, The World We Live In and From Insect Life – is a satirical play that was written in Czech by the Brothers Čapek (Karel and Josef), who collaborated on 4 stage works, of which this is the most famous. It was published in 1921 and premiered in 1922.
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Written by | Karel Čapek Josef Čapek |
Date premiered | 1922 |
Original language | Czech |
Genre | satire |
In the play, a tramp/narrator falls asleep in the woods and dreams of observing a range of insects that stand in for various human characteristics in terms of their lifestyle and morality: the flighty, vain butterfly, the obsequious, self-serving dung beetle, the ants, whose increasingly mechanized behaviour leads to a militaristic society. The anthropomorphized insects allow the writers to comment allegorically on life in post-World War I Czechoslovakia.[1]