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  • Textbook
  • © 1987

Bertolt Brecht

Authors:

Part of the book series: Modern Dramatists (MD)

Table of contents (9 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-xiii
  2. Introduction: Life and Works

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 1-15
  3. The Plays of the Twenties

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 16-34
  4. Theories of Theatre

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 35-48
  5. Brecht’s Practice of Theatre

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 49-69
  6. Saint Joan of the Stockyards

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 70-90
  7. Mother Courage and her Children

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 91-115
  8. The Life of Galileo

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 116-137
  9. The Good Person of Szechwan

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 138-156
  10. The Caucasian Chalk Circle

    • Ronald Speirs
    Pages 157-178
  11. Back Matter

    Pages 179-190

About this book

Brecht's reputation, which is now world-wide, rests principally on his contribution to political theatre in the twentieth century. He is known, not only for such major plays as Mother Courage and her Children, The Life of Galileo, The Good Person of Szechwan, or The Caucasian Chalk Circle, and for the concepts of 'Epic Theatre' or the 'alienation effect', but also for the exemplary productions with which the Berliner Ensemble scored successes both at its home in East Berlin and on its influential tours throughout Europe. However, Brecht also produced important work in the 1920s, before he became a committed political dramatist. This study therefore surveys his whole development, considering both the continuities and the discontinuities between his earlier and his later, Marxist, work examining critically the relations between theory and practice, and studying the major plays in detail. It argues that Brecht's procedures both of writing and production are better understood as rhetorical strategies than as 'scientific' demonstrations. '...Dr Speirs provides a balanced amount of description and of analysis, which together with details of productions (supported by eight pages of illustrations) will stimulate students of Brecht's drama as literature, as well as those interested in performance. A valuable addition to any school or college library, it is also at its very reasonable paperback price, a book which all Brecht enthusiasts will be able to purchase.' Times Educational Supplement.

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