||Book on Frisch, etc. || Book on Chalk Circle Plays || Resources on German Studies||

Play is Play by Peter Yang

A Book on Major Playwrights of the Epic Theater


see larger photo
Title Author ISBN Publisher Pages Year Availability
Play is Play. Theatrical Illusion in Max Frisch's Chinese Wall  and 'Epic' Plays by Brecht, Wilder, Hazelton, and Li Peter Yang 0-7618-1808-1 University Press of America

174 2000 Click here to compare prices.

Synopsis

This book takes a close look at plays by Max Frisch and other playwrights that critics commonly attribute to the "epic theater." It sheds new light on the aesthetic dynamics of this theater.

As one of the closest disciples of Brecht and Wilder, Frisch created in his Chinese Wall a play, in which the narrator and other characters supposedly destroy dramatic illusions by means of their appeals to the audience, their distance from other dramatic characters, and their temporal manipulation of dramatic events.

This book reexamines classical examples of “epic” plays to demonstrate that the so-called “epic” theater goes in fact far beyond being narrative, historical, distancing, and alienating. Just as in plays by other “epic” dramatists, the dramatic illusion in Frisch's play is far from being eliminated. Rather, it is intensified by an additional, yet different kind of, gripping illusion, a “theatrical illusion,” or an illusory theatrical “reality,” which involves the audience to the highest extent and with which the audience can hardly refuse to identify. The book concludes that the success of “epic” plays results from their characteristics as “theatrical” plays with modern multidimensional perspectives as opposed to neoclassic “dramatic” ones with a monolithic perspective.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction: What is the "Epic" Theater? 4
Chapter 1 Conceptional Foundations20
Impenetrable World 20
Unchangeable World as a Stage 22
Non-Teachable Audience 24
Powerlessness of the Poetry 27
Chapter 2 The Theatrical versus the Dramatic 30
Theatrical Communication versus Dramatic Communication32
Theatrical Presentation versus Dramatic Representation 34
Theatrical Illusion versus Dramatic Illusion 38
Chapter 3 The Play is Just a Play 50
Performative Playfulness 51
The Lyric, Poetical and Musical 56
Prologue or Play Containing Play 63
Intermezzo 67
Author and Theatrical Commentator 69
"Dramatic" Discourses and Scenes ad spectatores 76
Reference to Nondramatic Realities 85
Chapter 4 Introduction versus "Self"-Introduction 90
Introduction of the Play and Characters 90
"Self"-Introductions of Dramatic Characters 112

Chapter 5 Theater Remains Theater 120
Stage Remains Stage 120
Open Theatrical Pretense in Acting125
Chapter 6 Manipulation of Time in "Epic" Plays 135
Dramatic Time versus Theatrical Time 136
Time in Prologue and Time in Play 138
Interruption of Dramatic Time by Theatrical Time 141
Acted Time versus Narrated Time143
Time Traveling of Dramatic Characters 145
Anachronism in Stage Property and Costume150
Conclusion 153
References158
Index168
For further information, please e-mail University Press of America Customer Service or the author