Diesel eBooks
Search
            Advanced Search
Log In
 Acceptance Mark NEW
headline ebook banner
Tell a friend about the ebook: The Theatre of the Absurd
<misc11> ebook emailfriend
Similar Categories
Theater - History & Criticism


Fiction eBooks
General Fiction
Romance - All
Romance - Harlequin
Romance - Free   NEW!
Erotic eBooks
Fantasy
Science Fiction
Mystery & Detective
Suspense & Thrillers
Action & Adventure
Children's Fiction
Classics & Drama
Literary & Poetry
Download Free eBooks

Last Viewed

New to our eBook Store? Take a free trial run.

Talk To Us
If you notice any site errors or have an idea for our eBook store, we'd love to hear it no matter how small.

Your first time?
We recommend you download one of our test eBooks to make sure you have the right settings on your computer.




Thank you for your help regarding this matter and for doing it so soon. I appreciate it and I am very impressed with the level of customer service I have received. I shall buy more products from your ebook download store.

A. Shome
Great Britain




`
Home > Art & Music > Theater > Theater - History & Criticism > The Theatre of the Absurd-eBook
The Theatre of the Absurd
by Esslin, Martin
 
 
Our price:
Discount next order:
Effective price:
Mobi
The Theatre of the Absurd mobi iconpicture
$13.16
$-0.46
$12.70
The Theatre of the Absurd ebook buy mobipocket
add to wishlist
ePub
The Theatre of the Absurd Adobe iconpicture
$15.00
$-0.53
$14.47
The Theatre of the Absurd ebook buy adobe
add to wishlist
Palm
The Theatre of the Absurd palm iconpicture
$15.00
$-0.53
$14.47
The Theatre of the Absurd ebook buy ereader
add to wishlist

 

The Theatre of the Absurd
In 1953, Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot premiered at a tiny avant-garde theatre in Paris; within five years, it had been translated into more than twenty languages and seen by more than a million spectators. Its startling popularity marked the emergence of a new type of theatre whose proponents'Beckett, Ionesco, Genet, Pinter, and others'shattered dramatic conventions and paid scant attention to psychological realism, while highlighting their characters' inability to understand one another. In 1961, Martin Esslin gave a name to the phenomenon in his groundbreaking study of these playwrights who dramatized the absurdity at the core of the human condition. Over four decades after its initial publication, Esslin's landmark book has lost none of its freshness. The questions these dramatists raise about the struggle for meaning in a purposeless world are still as incisive and necessary today as they were when Beckett's tramps first waited beneath a dying tree on a lonely country road for a mysterious benefactor who would never show. Authoritative, engaging, and eminently readable, The Theatre of the Absurd is nothing short of a classic: vital reading for anyone with an interest in the theatre. From the Trade Paperback edition.


Share your thoughts on the The Theatre of the Absurd ebook with other internet viewers!
Title of ebook: The Theatre of the Absurd
ISBN: 9780307548016
parent-ISBN: 9781400075232
Publisher: Vintage
Pages: 480
Published: 04-2009
Released online for download: 04-01-2009
Author of eBook: Esslin, Martin

Format
Encrypted
Sku
ISBN
File size
Security
Printing
Copying
Read aloud
 
 
Devices
 
Adobe iconpicture ePub
Yes
777063864X
9780307548016
2033 KB
n/a
Not allowed
Not allowed
No
Sys Requirments
Download reader
 
Mobipocket reader iconpicture Mobipocket
Yes
9780307548016
9780307548016
714 KB
n/a
Not allowed
Not allowed
No
Sys Requirements
Download reader
 
Microsoft reader iconpicture eReader
Yes
0307548015
9780307548016
565 KB
n/a
Not allowed
Not allowed
No
Sys Requirments
Download reader
 

The Theatre of the Absurd


Chapter One

I

SAMUEL BECKETT

The search for the self



In his last will and testament, Murphy, the hero of Samuel Beckett's early novel of that name, enjoins his heirs and executors to place his ashes in a paper bag and take them to 'the Abbey Theatre, Lr Abbey Street, Dublin ... into what the great and good Lord Chesterfield calls the necessary house, where their happiest hours have been spent, on the right as one goes down into the pit . . . and that the chain be there pulled upon them, if possible during the performance of a piece.'1 This is a symbolic act in the true irreverent spirit of the anti-theatre, but one that also reveals where the author of Waiting for Godot received his first impressions of the type of drama against which he reacted in his rejection of what he has called 'the grotesque fallacy of realistic art-"that miserable statement of line and surface" and the penny-a-line vulgarity of a literature of notations'.2

Samuel Beckett was born in Dublin in 1906, the son of a quantity surveyor. Like Shaw, Wilde, and Yeats, he came from the Protestant Irish middle class and wa ... read full excerpt from: The Theatre of the Absurd ebook



Top eBooks in "Theater - History & Criticism"
The Theatre of the Absurd
by Esslin, Martin
audience, vol. 1, no. 2
Waltzing in the Dark: African American Vaudeville and Race Politics
by Gottschild, Brenda Dixon
The Tragedy of Abraham Lincoln
by Strozier, M., Stefan
Censorship of the American Theatre in the Twentieth Century
by Houchin, John H.
History of European Drama and Theatre
by Fischer-Lichte, Erika
The Trustus Plays: The Hammerstone, Drift, Holy Ghost
by Tuttle, Jon
Russia, Freaks and Foreigners: Three Performance Texts
by MacDonald, James

Help
Support Center
Report a problem
Knowledgebase/FAQ's
eBook Download Troubleshooter
Account Info
My history
My wishlist
Update info
New Arrivals
ALL
Romance
Science fiction
Fantasy
Business
Computers
Coming Soon
Top Sellers
ALL
Fiction
Romance
Science fiction
Fantasy
Business
Computers
Programming
Top Categories
About
Affiliate program
Contact us
Frequent buyers prog.
Gift certificates
How to order
Privacy & Security
Download Free eBooks
Press Kit
RSS Feed Listing
Download Free
eBooks Readers
Mobipocket Reader
Microsoft MS Reader
Adobe Reader
Palm eReader
To browse or view on:
iPhone
PDF ebooks
Sony Reader
Wireless Phone
Personal PC
CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html) via ,,38.107.191.80