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Home on the Stage
Domestic Spaces in Modern Drama

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  • Date Published: February 2018
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781107434998

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About the Authors
  • As a serious drama set in an ordinary middle-class home, Ibsen's A Doll's House established a new politics of the interior that was to have a lasting impact upon twentieth-century drama. In this innovative study, Nicholas Grene traces the changing forms of the home on the stage through nine of the greatest of modern plays and playwrights. From Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard through to Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire, domestic spaces and personal crises have been employed to express wider social conditions and themes of class, gender and family. In the later twentieth century and beyond, the most radically experimental dramatists created their own challenging theatrical interiors, including Beckett in Endgame, Pinter in The Homecoming and Parks in Topdog/Underdog. Grene analyses the full significance of these versions of domestic spaces to offer fresh insights into the portrayal of the naturalistic environment in modern drama.

    • Provides a unique and accessible overview of the treatment of domestic spaces in modern drama
    • Offers in-depth close readings of nine major plays from Ibsen's A Doll's House to Suzan-Lori Parks' Topdog/Underdog, including detailed information on their origins, themes and production history
    • Fourteen illustrations depict plans, stage sets and productions to show the variety of ways that works have been interpreted on stage
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    Awards

    • Shortlisted for the 2014 Society for Theatre Research Theatre Book Prize

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Suggestive and insightful.' Irish Times

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    Product details

    • Date Published: February 2018
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781107434998
    • length: 252 pages
    • dimensions: 230 x 153 x 15 mm
    • weight: 0.4kg
    • contains: 14 b/w illus.
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Introduction: Ibsen and after
    1. A Doll's House: the drama of the interior
    2. The Cherry Orchard: all Russia
    3. Heartbreak House: waiting for the Zeppelin
    4. Long Day's Journey into Night: the Tyrones at home in America
    5. A Streetcar Named Desire: see-through representation
    6. Endgame: in the refuge
    7. The Homecoming: men's room
    8. Arcadia: seeing double
    9. Topdog/Underdog: welcome to the family
    Conclusion: home base.

  • Author

    Nicholas Grene, Trinity College, Dublin
    Nicholas Grene is Professor of English Literature at Trinity College, Dublin, a Senior Fellow of the College, a Member of the Royal Irish Academy and a Life Member of Clare Hall, Cambridge. He has published widely on Shakespeare, drama, and Irish literature, and his books include Bernard Shaw: A Critical View (1984), Shakespeare's Tragic Imagination (1992), The Politics of Irish Drama (Cambridge, 1999) and Shakespeare's Serial History Plays (Cambridge, 2002). Among his most recent books are Yeats's Poetic Codes (2008), the New Mermaids edition of Major Barbara (2008), Synge and Edwardian Ireland (co-edited with Brian Cliff, 2011), and a memoir Nothing Quite Like It: An American-Irish Childhood (2011). He has been invited to speak in over twenty countries and has been a visiting professor at the University of New South Wales, Dartmouth College and the University of Paris IV (Sorbonne).

    Awards

    • Shortlisted for the 2014 Society for Theatre Research Theatre Book Prize

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