Arnold Wesker revisited:

In this penetrating reexamination of one of Britain's preeminent "Angry Young Men," Reade W. Dornan looks at Wesker's plays (particularly those written since 1970) from a 1990s perspective, seeking to restore balance to the critical consensus on Wesker and to underscore the impor...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Dornan, Reade W. (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: New York Twayne Publ. u.a. 1994
Schriftenreihe:Twayne's English authors series 506
Schlagworte:
Zusammenfassung:In this penetrating reexamination of one of Britain's preeminent "Angry Young Men," Reade W. Dornan looks at Wesker's plays (particularly those written since 1970) from a 1990s perspective, seeking to restore balance to the critical consensus on Wesker and to underscore the important role he has played in the development of English theater. Illuminating the areas of discord between Wesker and theater circles and critics - from the internal politics of the ill-fated Centre 42, a cooperative enterprise for working-class artists, to the actors' mutiny of the 1971 Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Journalists - Dornan judiciously mixes Wesker's responses to such biases with critical commentary on the plays themselves, from characterization to the broader social issues Wesker addresses
Chronicling the influence of his Jewish background on his writing, Dornan observes that Wesker has evolved into what she calls a melancholy humanist - a shift in perspective for which a broad segment of the left-leaning literary establishment has never forgiven him. Dornan argues that Wesker has found his voice as a humanist, as a champion of individual rights and human values, while defending the causes of the dispossessed, and that it is not his political alignment so much as a Jewish humanist philosophy that shapes his thoughts. Dornan ultimately observes that, as the playwright himself has said, Wesker's plays come out of his own experience, establishing him as a thoughtful writer who has stubbornly defied being pigeonholed - be it as heir to Osborne's existential worldview or as a "socialist playwright" - to carve out his own place in the British theater
Beschreibung:Bibliogr. S. 159 - 160
Beschreibung:XVII, 168 S. Ill.
ISBN:0805770313

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