Maeterlinck: Pellas et Melisande, with Les Aveugles, L'Intruse, Intrieur
By (Author) Maurice Maeterlinck
Volume editor Leighton Hodson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bristol Classical Press
25th March 1999
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Opera
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
782.1092
Paperback
140
Width 138mm, Height 215mm, Spine 8mm
184g
Maeterlincks plays typify the spirit of Symbolism and the fin de sicle ethos of the 1890s, but equally they herald in their minimalism the developments of certain features of the late 20th century modernism. Thematically, they evoke some the deeper obsessions of the Theatre of the Absurd. Maeterlincks spare and allusive style exploits the unspoken as a force in dramatic situation, and his use of silence promotes a dramatic technique that invites ever deeper introspection in the spectator. The poetic and non-discursive approach creates mystery a foretaste of Beckett and Pinter. The plays challenged stage designers and performers alike in their innovative use of stage pictures, often akin to film technique. The usual criticism of Maeterlincks plays, when they were first produced, centred on what as seen as escapist whims. A century later, attention is turning towards the deeper meanings behind that facade. Intended for the general reader as well as undergraduates, this new edition is the first with English Introduction and Notes; it brings together Pellas and Mlisande, Les Aveugles, LIntruse, and Intrieur, making accessible texts otherwise difficult to find, and presents them in a context which encourages full appreciation.
Leighton Hodson is Senior Research Fellow at the University of Glasgow, and author of Proust: the critical heritage (1989), Prousts A lombre des jeunes filles en fleurs: a critical guide (1994) and editor of Prousts Combray (1996, also published by Bloomsbury).