Three Plays: Dark River, Arthur Aronymus and His Ancestors, and I and I (European Drama Classics) - Else Lasker-schuler - Books - Northwestern University Press - 9780810121980 - October 1, 2005
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

Three Plays: Dark River, Arthur Aronymus and His Ancestors, and I and I (European Drama Classics) 1st edition

Else Lasker-schuler

Christmas presents can be returned until 31 January
Add to your iMusic wish list

Three Plays: Dark River, Arthur Aronymus and His Ancestors, and I and I (European Drama Classics) 1st edition

Avant-garde plays by a gifted and unconventional German Jewish writer, one of the few women among the Expressionists of the Berlin Moderns

Famous for her poetry and infamous for her bohemian lifestyle, as well as her association with political radicals, Else Lasker-Schüler (1869-1945) is only now returning to just renown as one of the few women writers within the Expressionist movement of the early twentieth century. These plays-Dark River, Arthur Aronymus and His Ancestors, and I and I-in Jane Curtis's fluid translation, allow readers of English to experience the radically avant-garde style that put Lasker-Schüler on a par with Brecht in her day, as well as the passionate treatment of questions of gender, ethnicity, and sexuality that placed her well ahead of her time. Lasker-Schüler's plays reflect her unusual life among the Berlin Moderns of the 1910s and 20s. The daughter of a well-to-do Jewish banker and builder, Else Schüler gave up her bourgeois existence as a doctor's wife for the artistic, social, and political uncertainties that would characterize the rest of her life. Many of her finest poems and plays were written amidst the cafe society of Berlin, where she knew some of the great expressionist artists of the period. The death of her beloved son in 1927, which led her to intense introspection and reflection on the Jewish tradition, especially mysticism and the Kabbalah, also marked the beginning of Lasker-Schüler's years of tragedy, loss, and dislocation, culminating in her flight from Nazi Germany to Switzerland and then Jerusalem, where she ended her days as an eccentric pauper.
The plays in this volume mark Lasker-Schüler's movement away from the traditional aesthetic canon, revealing a unique formal development from naturalistic expressionist episodes in the lyrical Dark River to a historicizing politicization of the theater in Arthur Aronymous to the forms of montage and "epic" presentations in I and I. A short preface by Inca Molina Rumold places each play in its historical, biographical, and artistic context.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released October 1, 2005
ISBN13 9780810121980
Publishers Northwestern University Press
Pages 312
Dimensions 130 × 190 × 20 mm   ·   308 g
Language English  
Contributor Inca Rumold
Contributor Jane Curtis

Show all

More by Else Lasker-schuler