The Past as Present in the Drama of August Wilson
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The University of Michigan Press
Published:30th May '06
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Pulitzer-prizewinning playwright August Wilson, author of ""Fences"", ""Ma Rainey's Black Bottom"", and ""The Piano Lesson"", among other dramatic works, was one of the most well-respected American playwrights on the contemporary stage. As the founder of the Black Horizon Theater Company, his self-defined dramatic project was to review twentieth-century African American history by creating a play for each decade. Theater scholar and critic Harry J. Elam, Jr. examines Wilson's published plays within the context of contemporary African American literature and in relation to concepts of memory and history, culture and resistance, race and representation. Elam finds that each of Wilson's plays recaptures narratives lost, ignored, or avoided to create a new experience of the past that questions the historical categories of race and the meanings of blackness.
... what Elam offers is not mere conjecture but about what Wilson might think, but thoughtful insight into the playwright's chief concepts and the questions they raise. - American Theatre
ISBN: 9780472031634
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 425g
292 pages