Buch, Englisch, 532 Seiten, Format (B × H): 183 mm x 260 mm, Gewicht: 1188 g
Buch, Englisch, 532 Seiten, Format (B × H): 183 mm x 260 mm, Gewicht: 1188 g
Reihe: Routledge Literature Companions
ISBN: 978-1-032-18812-6
Verlag: Routledge
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Literaturwissenschaft Literarische Strömungen & Epochen
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Moderne Philosophische Disziplinen Existenzphilosophie, Lebensphilosophie
- Geisteswissenschaften Theater- und Filmwissenschaft | Andere Darstellende Künste Theaterwissenschaft Theatergeschichte
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction: What Is Absurdist Literature? And Is that What We Are Calling It Now?; PART I Origins; SECTION 1 What Led to Absurdist Literature?; 1 Historical Precursors, I: Ancient Tragicomedy and Pastoral Plays; 2 Historical Precursors, II: Nonsense! From Carroll and Lear through Wilde and Sitwell to the Postmodern; 3 Historical Precursors, III: Gogol and Dostoevsky; 4 Bartleby and Beckett; 5 Kafka as Literature of the Absurd; 6 OBERIU: The Absurd as a Critique of Poetic Reason; 7 The Absurd: Dada and Surrealism; 8 T. S. Eliot and the Group Theatre; SECTION 2 Philosophical Origins: Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Sartre, and Camus; 9 Nietzsche’s Absurd Tragedy; 10 Kierkegaard and the Absurd; 11 Sartre and the Absurd; 12 Camus and Absurdity; PART II Absurdist Literature; SECTION 3 Samuel Beckett; 13 Show not Tell: The "Absurdist" Theatre of Samuel Becket; 14 Beckett’s Fiction; 15 Credo quia absurdum est: The Subversion of the Rational in Samuel Beckett’s Early Poetics; 16 Samuel Beckett’s Television Plays; 17 Samuel Beckett’s Radio Plays; SECTION 4 1950s: The First Wave; 18 Arthur Adamov; 19 Jean Genet; 20 Eugène Ionesco; 21 Harold Pinter and the Theatre of the Absurd; SECTION 5 1960s: The Emergence of a So-Called "Movement" – Absurdist Literature in English; 22 Edward Albee, Absurdist; 23 Amiri Baraka; 24 Jack Gelber; 25 Arthur Kopit; 26 He Brought Her Heart Back in a Box: Adrienne Kennedy’s Absurdist Dreamwrighting; 27 Tom Stoppard and the Absurd; 28 Guerrilla Theatre as Absurd Performance; 29 Understanding the Absurd under the Shadow of Late Capitalism: Philip K. Dick, Thomas Pynchon, and Kurt Vonnegut; 30 Arrabal’s Panic Allowances for the Absurd; 31 Friedrich Dürrenmatt; 32 St. Sisyphus: Günter Grass’s Absurdist Social Democracy; 33 (Re)Considering Slawomir Mrozek; PART III Absurdist Legacies; SECTION 6 Feminist, LGBTQ+, and Multiethnic Absurdist Literature; 34 Amusing and Shocking: Caryl Churchill’s Absurdist Drama; 35 Split Britches and the Camp Absurd; 36 "Beckett Just Seems So Black to Me": Suzan-Lori Parks as Absurdist Playwright; 37 (Multi)Ethnic Absurdist Theater; SECTION 7 World Absurdist Literature; 38 Luminaries of the Aesthetics of the Absurd in Latin America; 39 Response and Resistance: A Bird’s-eye View of the Absurd in the Spanish-speaking Caribbean; 40 Middle Eastern Absurdist Literature; 41 Indian Theatres of the Absurd: Cultural Politics of Transformation; 42 Postcolonial Absurdist Literature; 43 Decolonisation and the Theatre of the Absurd; 44 Absurdist Cinema, Television, and Adaptations around the World