Search Books
New Directions in Ecofemini… Ecological Economics and Su…

Brecht, Pinter, and the Avant-Garde: Three Essays on Modernist Drama (Corpus of Gothic Sculpture in American Collections)

Author Bert Cardullo
Publisher Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Category Hardcover
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
50.99 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $98.22

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
Author(s)Bert Cardullo
ISBN / ASIN1847186807
ISBN-139781847186805
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank7,107,310
CategoryHardcover
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This is a collection of three long essays arranged around the primordial subject of realism and non-realism or anti-realism (which can also be termed the experimental or non-representational) in drama, as this subject manifests itself in modern Europe and contemporary America, and at the moment when the theater returns to its non-realistic origins in ancient Greeceâthe very moment, paradoxically, when surface realism reaches its zenith on the Western stage. Brecht, Pinter, and the Avant-Garde: Three Essays on Modernist Drama treats not only the issue of realism versus anti-realism in theater from a practical as well as a theoretical point of view. It also treats a number of subjects related to this issue: the relationship of the non-real to the spiritual or the religious; the avant-garde, the rearguard, and the middle-to-advanced artistic ground in between claimed by such major figures as Bertolt Brecht and Harold Pinter; the military, scientific, and philosophical origins of theatrical avant-gardism; the deceptive ease, and consequent shallowness, of superficial or imitative realism; and the use of distancing devices or defamiliarization-effects in the Epic Theater of Brecht, as well as the use of similarly distancing comedy on the part of Pinter. In sum, Brecht, Pinter, and the Avant-Garde treats the subject of realism and non-realism from the point of view of the theaterâs ability to create not only the illusion of reality, but also the reality of illusion onstage (the reality, that is, of the unreal, or of the illusion-making capacity, illusion-projecting essence, or illusion-embracing tendency of the human mind)âas well as something in between the two. Moreover, there are no single-authored performing-arts books in English that feature the comparative, in-depth perspective of this book, in which so vital, if sometimes vexing, a subject as realistic versus non-realistic theater is discussed in the context of Euro-American drama.
After the Storm
View
Rescue Party
View
Pop-Up Book : The Quest for the Aztec Gold
View
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street (Dr.Seus…
View
Cat in the Hat Comes Back (Beginner Books)
View
Autumn Story: Introduce children to the seasons in the…
View
Red shift
View
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (The Chronicles o…
View
LITTLE GREY RABBIT'S PARTY
View