
The Routledge Companion to Absurdist Literature
574
The Routledge Companion to Absurdist Literature
574Hardcover
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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781032188126 |
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Publisher: | Taylor & Francis |
Publication date: | 05/29/2024 |
Series: | Routledge Literature Companions |
Pages: | 574 |
Product dimensions: | 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x (d) |
About the Author
Table of Contents
List of contributors
Introduction: Absurdist Literature What is it? and is that What We are Calling it Now? (Michael Y. Bennett)
PART ONE: ORIGINS
Section 1. What led to absurdist literature?
1) Historical Precursors, I: Ancient Tragicomedy and Pastoral plays (Claire Sommers)
2) Historical Precursors, II: Nonsense! From Carroll and Lear through Wilde and Sitwell to the Postmodern (Holly Laird)
3) Historical Precursors, III: Gogol and Dostoevsky (Irina Erman)
4) Bartleby and Beckett (Graley Harren)
5) KAFKA AS LITERATURE OF THE ABSURD (Meindert Peters)
6) OBERIU: the Absurd as a Critique of Poetic Reason (Evgeny Povlov)
7) Dada and Surrealism (Elza Adamowicz)
8) T. S. Eliot and The Group Theatre (Geoffrey Lokke)
Section 2. Philosophical Origins–Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Sartre, and Camus
9) Nietzsche’s Absurd Tragedy (Elliott Turley)
10) Kierkegaard and the Absurd (Leonardo Lisi)
11) Sartre and the Absurd (Christopher Minor)
12) Camus and Absurdity (Ronald Aronson)
PART II: ABSURDIST LITERATURE
Section 3. Samuel Beckett
13) “Show not Tell: The ‘Absurdist’ Theatre of Samuel Beckett” (Linda Ben-Zvi)
14) Beckett’s Fiction (Paul Sheehan)
15) Credo quia absurdum est: the Subversion of the Rational in Samuel Beckett’s Early Poetics. (Chris Ackerley)
16) Samuel Beckett’s Television Plays (Jonathan Bignell)
17) Samuel Beckett’s radio plays (Pedro Querido)
Section 4. 1950s: The First Wave
18) Arthur Adamov (Richard Jones)
19) Jean Genet (Stefano Boselli)
20) Eugène Ionesco (Julia Elsky)
21) Harold Pinter (Ann C. Hall)
Section 5. 1960s: The Emergence of a So-Called “Movement”
Absurdist Literature in English
22) Edward Albee, Absurdist (Matthew Roudané)
23) Amiri Baraka (Susan Stone-Lawrence)
24) Jack Gelber (John Patrick Bray)
25) Arthur Kopit (David Coley)
26) “He Brought her Heart Back in a Box: Adrienne Kennedy’s Absurdist Dreamwrighting” (David A. Crespy)
27) Tom Stoppard and the Absurd (James N. Loehlin)
28) Guerilla Theatre as Absurd Performance (Chris McCoy)
29) Understanding the Absurd Under the Shadow of Late Capitalism: Philip K. Dick, Thomas Pynchon, and Kurt Vonnegut (Eyal Tamir)
30) Arrabal's Panic Allowances for the Absurd (Felicia Hardison Londré)
31) Friedrich Dürrenmatt (René Koglbauer)
32) St. Sisyphus: Günter Grass’s Absurdist Social Democracy (Alex Cole)
33) . (Re)Considering Sławomir Mrożek (Conrad Alexandrowicz)
PART III: ABSURDIST LEGACIES
Section 6. Feminist, LGBTQ+, and Multiethnic Absurdist Literature
34) Amusing and Shocking: Caryl Churchill’s Absurdist Drama (Peta Tait)
35) Split Britches and the Camp Absurd (Benjamin Gillespie)
36) “Beckett Just Seems so Black to Me”: Suzan-Lori Parks as Absurdist Playwright (Kevin J Wetmore, Jr)
37) (Multi)Ethnic Absurdist Theatre (Kimberly Jew)
Section 7. World Absurdist Literature
38) Luminaries of The Aesthetics of the Absurd in Latin America (Ramona Hernández and Pedro José Ortega)
39) “Response and Resistance: A Bird’s-eye View of the Absurd in the Spanish-speaking Caribbean" (Nancy Bird-Soto)
40) Middle Eastern Absurdist Literature (Marvin A. Carlson)
41) Indian Theatres of the Absurd: Cultural Politics of Transformation (Arka Chattopadhyay)
42) Postcolonial Absurdist Literature (Mike Marais)
43) Decolonisation and the Theatre of the Absurd (Nic Barilar and Hannah Simpson)
44) Absurdist Cinema, Television, and Adaptations around the World (Shai Tubali)
Index