Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 1st August 2006
Paperback
Published: 27th October 2000
Paperback
Published: 16th June 2004
Strindberg: The Plays: Volume Two: The Storm; The Burned Site; The Ghost Sonata; The Pelican
By (Author) August Strindberg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Oberon Books Ltd
16th June 2004
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
839.726
Paperback
304
Width 130mm, Height 210mm
Includes The Chamber Plays (The Storm, The Burned Site, The Ghost Sonata, The Pelican, The Black Glove) and The Great Highway August Strindberg, the great Swedish dramatist and author, had a profound influence on European drama. His career was particularly marked by a desire to experiment with and redefine theatre. With roots in psychological naturalism, he was nevertheless fascinated by symbols, dreams and fantasies.His later plays anticipated and paved the way for surrealistic, expressionistic and absurdist theatre.This, the second volume of the plays of Strindberg publishedby Oberon Books, contains the Chamber Plays (The Storm, The Burned Site, The Ghost Sonata, The Pelican, The Black Glove) - some of the most characteristic and original of Strindbergs works - as well as Strindbergs last great play, written shortly before his death. This is The Great Highway, one of the expressionist masterpiecesof modern drama. A man walks the Alps encountering feuding millers, a hermit, a murderer, a Japanese man resolved to burn himself to death to cleanse him of his existence, and a little girl waiting for her father to return. In the end he seeks to justify his life to an unknown woman whilst coughing blood into his handkerchief. The Tempter himself arrives with an offer from the Grand Duke.... Gregory Mottons translations combine an unprecedented faithfulness to Strindbergs original texts with the natural fluency of one of our most linguistically able contemporary playwrights.
August Strindberg (1849-1912) is best-known for his misogyny and as the author of Miss Julie (1889). His first success came as a novelist and autobiographer. His plays (and he wrote over sixty) were deeply controversial in their time and still are to some extent. They range form bold naturalism (e.g. The father, 1887) to an entralling expressionism (e.g. The Ghost Sonata, 1907).