Essays on German Theater: Lessing, Brecht, Durrenmatt, and others
By (Author) Margaret Herzfeld-Sander
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
1st December 1997
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
832.009
Paperback
320
300g
It is against this background of the theater's high prestige as a forum for ideas, as the summit of the literary arts, as the place where all the arts coalesce in a Wagnerian 'Gesamtkunstwerk' or dialectically oppose and ironize each other in Brechtian epic 'alienation, ' of the drama as a method of thought, of concrete philosophizing, that the astounding wealth of critical and theoretical writings about drama and theater that the German-speaking world has produced over the last two hundred and fifty years must be seen and appreciated.
Martin Julius Esslin (1918-2002) was a Hungarian-born English playwright and critic best known for coining the term "The Theatre of the Absurd" in his work of that name (1962).