Vital Lie: Reality and Illusion in Modern Drama

Summary
The Vital Lie is the first book to examine the reality-illusion conflict in modern drama from Ibsen to present-day playwrights. The book questions why vital lies, lies necessary for life itself, are such an obsessive concern for playwrights of the last hundred years. Using the work of fifteen playwrights, Abbott seeks to discover if modern playwrights treat illusions as helpful or necessary to life, or as signals of sicknesses from which human beings need to be cured. What happens to characters when they are forced to face the truth about themselves and their worlds without the protection of their illusions? The author develops a three-part historical analysis of the use of the reality-illusion theme, from its origins as a metaphysical search to its current elaborations as a theatrical game.
Similar Books
-
Eine Art Einleitung / Seinesgleichen Geschieht
by Robert Musil
-
The Man Without Qualities: v. 1
by Robert Musil
-
The Man Without Qualities: Volume One
by Robert Musil
-
Humoring the Body: Emotions and the Shakespearean Stage
by Gail Kern Paster
-
Influences of Geographic Environment: On the Basis of Ratzel s System of Anthropo-Geogra
by Ellen Churchill Semple
-
Shakespeare's Double Helix
by Henry S. Turner
-
The Vital Lie: Reality and Illusion in Modern Drama
by Anthony S. Abbott