Last Operas and Plays
Last Operas and Plays
When I see a thing it is not a play for me, but when I write something that somebody else can see then it is a play for me. --Gertrude Stein
In the more than seventy-five plats Gertrude Stein wrote between 1913 and 1946, she envisioned a new dramaturgy, beginning with her pictorial conception of a play as a landscape. She drew into her plays the daily flow of life around her--including the natural world--and turned cities, villages, parts of the dramatic structure, and even her own friends into characters. She made punctuation and typography part of her compositional style and chose words for their joyful impact as sound andwordplay. For Strin, the writing process itself was always important in delevoping the continuous present at the heart of her work.
Long out of print, Last Opera and Plays again makes available many of Stein's most important and most-produced works. As a special feature, it also included her thought-provoking essay Plays, in which she reflects on the experience in the theater of seeing and hearing, and on emotion and time. Now nearly a half century after her deathe, writes Bonnie Marranca in her introduction, it is indisputable that Gertrude Stein is the great American modernist mind. No American author has been more influential for more generations of artists in the worlds of theater, dance, music, poetry, painting, and fiction.
Author: Gertrude Stein
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Published: 05/22/1995
Pages: 536
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.34lbs
Size: 8.40h x 5.50w x 1.23d
ISBN: 9780801849855
Review Citation(s):
Library Journal 09/15/1995 pg. 58
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