In literature, an empty chair can signify a personal loss or absence of an important character or person. It can be the empty chair at a meal; the person dead or cold-shouldering the family.
The silence of the empty chair is used to amazing effect in The Little Red Chairs by Edna O'Brien. It has wide-ranging themes, but the most clearly portrayed is that of exile; immigration and asylum. The chairs of the title were laid out in rows on the 6th of April 2012, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the start of the siege of Sarajevo by Bosnian Serb forces. There were 11,541 along the 800 meters of the main street of Sarajevo -- one for every man, woman, and child killed during the siege of the city – many of them small, representing the hundreds of children killed. This symbolic act is described at the beginning of this amazing novel, and then not mentioned again. You can read a review of the book here.
In medieval times, chairs were an obvious indicator of a person’s wealth or craft. There is little mention of chairs in the Bible, or in Homer, and in some plays by Shakespeare almost no one ever sits down. But by the middle of the 19th century, it is a completely different story. Charles Dickens, Thackeray, Hardy, Austin; they all have their chairs, mostly middle-class and often symbolising hearth, home and family.
But then you can imagine an extravagant chair like a throne which symbolises status. Royalty traditionally are seated on chairs embellished with gold and gems, making the symbolism of the throne an ultimate status of superiority –
a place to sit high above the mass of people and judge those below you in order to make decisions about your realm. As George RR Martin writes;
‘When you play the game of thrones, you win or you die:'
Throughout his series A Song of Ice and Fire, warring houses fight and plot for their moment on the Iron Throne, which stands as a bloody and brutal symbol of power.
So chairs are fair game as symbols, and there are just so many other ways emotions and storylines can be represented by them. It may be simply describing the chair and thus describing the seated character. Or, like O'Brien and Petrov, it may a symbol of something deeply important to society.
To read more blogposts about symbolism in literature, click here
Using symbols to represent abstract ideas or qualities enhances the depths of your writing. Poetry, fiction, nonfiction, film scripts, plays, they all use symbolism because it offers a subtlety of meaning – a nuance – creating layers in your work and giving your writing a poetic feel.