Text and PresentationUniversity Press of America, 1990 - 112 pages This volume presents the best of the papers presented at the 1989 Comparative Drama Conference held annually at the University of Florida under the auspices of the Classics Department. Contents: Spatio-Temporality as Theater Performance; Subversive Sophocles, Anarchic Aeschylus: The Living Theatre and Greek Tragedy; Expressionism and Deconstructionism: A Critical Comparison; Theatrical Revolution: Edward Gordon Craig's 'Much Ado About Nothing' (1903); Arnolt Bronnen's Austro-Expressionist War Plays; Camera Language: Picturing Pinter's The Homecoming; Doubling and Irrationality in Pier Paolo Pasolini's Medea; The Naming of Rance: Orton's Allusions to Henrik Ibsen in What the Butler Saw; From Scenario to Script: O'Neill's Use of History in The Creation of A Touch of the Poet and More Stately Mansions; Ferdinand Vanek, or Compliant Protest; Woman Takes Center Stage: Three Versions of "The Female Condition" on the German Theatre Stage Today; Beauty Non-Beauty in Euripides' Orestes and Metope XXVII From the Parthenon; Haunting Ourselves: History and Utopia in Howard Brenton's Bloody Poetry and Greenland; and Lameness and Limping in Southern Plays. |
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Page 46
... happy families . The time is after lunch , the conversation over coffee : 2 " Photographs [ are ] produced under such circumstances that they [ are ] physically forced to correspond point by point to nature " ( Peirce 2.281 ) . In his ...
... happy families . The time is after lunch , the conversation over coffee : 2 " Photographs [ are ] produced under such circumstances that they [ are ] physically forced to correspond point by point to nature " ( Peirce 2.281 ) . In his ...
Page 48
... happy . . . to know that you're pleased with me . Pause . I think he wondered whether you would be pleased with me . ( 49 ) Ruth pauses . *** Ruth's pauses are as much a part of her speech as words . When , a few minutes later , she ...
... happy . . . to know that you're pleased with me . Pause . I think he wondered whether you would be pleased with me . ( 49 ) Ruth pauses . *** Ruth's pauses are as much a part of her speech as words . When , a few minutes later , she ...
Contents
SPATIOTEMPORALITY AS THEATER | 1 |
THE LIVING | 11 |
A CRITICAL | 19 |
Copyright | |
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action actors Antigone appears aqua aqua Arnolt Bronnen audience beautiful becomes Berlin Bloody Poetry Brecht Brenton Bronnen Butler Saw Byron Centaur character chronotope Colchian create Creon crippled critical cycle Czech death deconstructionism diegetic drama E.G. Craig Edward Gordon Craig Eugene O'Neill Euripides expressionism expressionist feminist film German German expressionism Glauce's Greek Greenland Harold Pinter Havel Homecoming human identity images Irving Jason Joe Orton Julian Beck lame language Lenny limping literary Living Theatre London Lyceum Mansions meaning Medea mimetic Mother Courage movement narrative non-beautiful notes O'Neill's Orestes Orton performance photograph Pinter's plays play's playwright Poet political Polynices prison production protokoll Rance Rance's reality reveals ritual role Ruth Ruth's scenario scene sense sexual Shaw Shelley significant social society sparagmos spatio-temporal stage structure Sturm gegen Gott sturmpatrull symbols Terry theatrical traditional tragedy trans University Press Vaněk Vanek plays versions woman women writing York