`immaculately edited ... This selection amply shows that they didn't pass out of fashion into obscurity, but into literature. They are always original and invariably surprising.' Andrew Motion, The Observer

Just as critical debate about Louis MacNeice's wrinting will inevitably be enlivened by this invaluable new resource, so will understanding be increased about the much under-discussed two decades of English literaru history that followed the Second Worl War, since the book amplifies and broadens our knowledge of the cultural context in which MacNeice wrote and conceived his literary projects.

Review of English Studies

Heuser's and McDonald's edition is competent and assertive, without being overtly ideological.

Essays in Theatre

Louis MacNeice (1907-1963) is rightly regarded as one of the foremost Irish poets of this century, but he was also a distinctive, gifted, and popular playwright. This unique selection of eight of MacNeice's best-known plays, most of which were written for BBC Radio, draws on the most authoritative texts to provide a much-needed reminder of the power of his dramatic writing. All the plays are published here in authentic versions for the first time, several considerably changed, and two entirely new plays, never before published. The volume comprises MacNeice's famous The Dark Tower, published here for the first time in its third and final version; the saga play They Met on Good Friday and the parable The Mad Islands, both of which use explicitly Irish subject-matter; the stage play One for the Grave, which mercilessly satirizes television and commercialism; the epic Christopher Columbus; He Had a Date (in its second version), an experiment in radio biography; Prisoner's Progress, a prize-winning parable about an escape from a prisoner-of-war camp; and MacNeice's last play, Persons from Porlock, which traces the nemesis of an artist and was broadcast just four days before MacNeice's own death. This generous and representative selection makes available again MacNeice's entertaining and innovative Irish blend of fantasy and realism, prose and verse, and offers important new perspectives on MacNeice's poetry.
Les mer
This volume contains eight of Louis MacNeice's best plays, most of which were written for BBC Radio. It draws on the most authoritative texts. Alan Heuser is the editor of "Selected Literary Criticism of Louis MacNeice" and "Selected Prose of Louis MacNeice".
Les mer
Christopher Columbus; He had a date, or what bearing?; The dark tower; Prisoner's progress; One for the grave; They met on Good Friday; The mad islands; Persons from Porlock. Appendices: author's introduction to "Christopher Columbus" - some comments on radio drama (1944); author's general introduction to "The Dark Tower and Other Radio Scripts" (1947).
Les mer
`immaculately edited ... This selection amply shows that they didn't pass out of fashion into obscurity, but into literature. They are always original and invariably surprising.' Andrew Motion, The Observer
Les mer
`immaculately edited ... This selection amply shows that they didn't pass out of fashion into obscurity, but into literature. They are always original and invariably surprising.' Andrew Motion, The Observer `Just as critical debate about Louis MacNeice's wrinting will inevitably be enlivened by this invaluable new resource, so will understanding be increased about the much under-discussed two decades of English literaru history that followed the Second Worl War, since the book amplifies and broadens our knowledge of the cultural context in which MacNeice wrote and conceived his literary projects.' Review of English Studies `Heuser's and McDonald's edition is competent and assertive, without being overtly ideological.' Essays in Theatre
Les mer
Unique selection of MacNeice's plays

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198112457
Publisert
1993
Utgiver
Vendor
Clarendon Press
Vekt
659 gr
Høyde
224 mm
Bredde
144 mm
Dybde
31 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
420

Forfatter