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Synge and Irish Nationalism The Precursor to Revolution
Book Code: GM2424
ISBN: 0-313-32424-7
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-32424-6
136 pages, works cited
Greenwood Press
Publication: 10/30/2002
List Price: $95.00 (UK Sterling Price: £54.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Drama and Theatre Studies
Series Number: 98
Reviews:
  • [t]his work will stimulate discussions about the traditional reading of Synge's play. Recommended. Collections supporting study of Irish drama at the upper-division undergraduate level and above.
    —Choice
    June 2003
  • Endorsement From Stephen Watt
    Department of English
    Indiana University:
    Nelson Ritschel has done a wonderful job of reading Synge in ways from which we can all learn a great deal. It is a book to which I shall return eagerly and regularly, especially when teaching Synge's plays within a strong-and heretofore only weakly understood-theatre historical context.
Description: One of the most important playwrights of the Irish Renaissance, John Millington Synge is receiving renewed attention as his works are reread in light of the political and cultural contexts of his time. This book argues that his plays are far more deeply rooted, thematically and aesthetically, in the ancient native literature than was previously believed. It demonstrates that Synge borrowed themes and ideology from the ancient culture, serving as a nationalist agenda far more radical and modern than the agendas of the most common nationalists in his day. Synge rejects these nationalists, whom he believed were embracing foreign influences that were drowning Ireland in conservatively capitalistic initiatives and values. The book's most important section examines The Playboy of the Western World. It discusses the play's characters as representative and recognizable types and reconsiders the play's thematic depiction of violence. Synge's representation of both commenced the process of separating and identifying the nationalist camps in Dublin from 1907 on. The volume argues that Synge's play drafted what became the Easter Rising. This argument is furthered through Synge's Deirdre of the Sorrows and the influence that his works ultimately bore on the plays and ideologies of Thomas MacDonagh, Padaraic Pearse, and James Connolly. The book also explores the acting style originally used to perform Synge's plays, thus gathering further evidence for its argument.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • Prologue
  • "Everything Irish"
  • A Theatre of Violence
  • A Gallous Story and a Gallous Deed
  • The Performance of Synge
  • Epilogue
  • Works Cited
  • Index
LC Card Number: 2002070020
LCC Class: PR5534
Dewey Class: 822
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