Glancing at Dramatists' Dialogue: From Shakespeare to Suzan-Lori Parks
By (Author) Ruby Cohn
Volume editor Dr Daniela Caselli
Volume editor Hannah Simpson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
16th October 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: plays and playwrights
Classic and pre-20th century plays
Modern and contemporary plays (c 1900 onwards)
822.00926
Hardback
240
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
This book examines dramatic dialogue in English-language theatre, tracing verbal invention across four centuries from Shakespeare and Restoration comedy right up to contemporary English and American theatre.
Published posthumously, this renowned theatre scholar's book considers English dramatic dialogue as exemplified in the verbal invention of particular plays. That invention is traced through puns, repetitions, adroit clichs, occasional neologisms, malapropisms, sound play and more or less recondite allusions.
In eight chapters, Cohn offers close readings of monologue and dialogue in plays by William Shakespeare, William Wycherley, George Etherege, William Congreve, Oscar Wilde, Samuel Beckett, Edward Albee, Harold Pinter, David Mamet, Tom Stoppard, Sarah Kane, Mark Ravenhill, Caryl Churchill, Sam Shepard, Adrienne Kennedy and Suzan-Lori Parks.
Its a fascinating text, written with Cohns characteristic wit, warmth and lucidity, and offers both an authoritative introduction to theatre dialogue and a remarkable final addition to Cohns scholarly legacy.
Ruby Cohn (1922 - 2011) was for 30 years at UC Davis, where she was a member of the comparative literature and theatre departments and affiliated with the English and French departments. She taught courses on modern and experimental drama, Shakespeares legacies in modern drama, dramatic genres, and Samuel Beckett and his contemporaries. She was one of the foremost authorities on the work of Samuel Beckett and published a number of books on his work, including A Beckett Canon (2001).
Daniela Caselli is Professor of Modern Literature in the English Department at the University of Manchester, UK. She is the author of Insufferable: Beckett, Gender and Sexuality (2023), Improper Modernism: Djuna Barness Bewildering Corpus (2009) and Becketts Dantes: Intertextuality in the Fiction and Criticism (2005). She edited Beckett and Nothing in 2010. Her work has appeared in Comparative Literature (2017), Parallax (2016), The Cambridge Companion to American Gay and Lesbian Literature (2015), and Feminist Theory (2010).
Hannah Simpson is Lecturer in Drama and Performance in the English Faculty at the University of Edinburgh, UK. She is the author of Samuel Beckett and the Theatre of the Witness: Pain in Post-War Francophone Drama (2022) and Samuel Beckett and Disability Performance (2022). She has edited special issues for Twentieth Century Literature, Medical Humanities and the Journal of War and Culture Studies, serves as the Theatre Review Editor for The Beckett Circle at the Samuel Beckett Society.