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Eugene O'Neill : The German Reception of America's First Dramatist

Part of the German Studies in America series
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The reputation which O'Neill enjoyed in Germany is treated as well as the critical and popular response to his individual works.

Greeted during the thirties as a very American dramatist and a revolutionary influence in the theater of his own country, the playwright was seen abroad as a conservative successor to the European tradition of Strindberg, Ibsen, and Hauptmann.

After World War II, however, all this changed. He was heard then as the voice from America that provided existential hope to an audience beset by economic hardship, the anxieties of the cold war, feelings of guilt and uncertainty.

Extremely popular, his works were performed more frequently during the decades of the fifties and thereafter than any other foreign dramatist except Shakespeare.

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£27.20
Product Details
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
0820401560 / 9780820401560
Leather / fine binding
812.52
31/12/1984
United States
211 pages
430 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More