1st Edition

History of European Drama and Theatre

By Erika Fischer-Lichte Copyright 2002
    416 Pages
    by Routledge

    416 Pages
    by Routledge

    This major study reconstructs the vast history of European drama from Greek tragedy through to twentieth-century theatre, focusing on the subject of identity. Throughout history, drama has performed and represented political, religious, national, ethnic, class-related, gendered, and individual concepts of identity.

    Erika Fischer-Lichte's topics include:

    * ancient Greek theatre
    * Shakespeare and Elizabethan theatre by Corneilli, Racine, Molière
    * the Italian commedia dell'arte and its transformations into eighteenth-century drama
    * the German Enlightenment - Lessing, Schiller, Goethe, and Lenz
    * romanticism by Kleist, Byron, Shelley, Hugo, de Vigny, Musset, Büchner, and Nestroy
    * the turn of the century - Ibsen, Strindberg, Chekhov, Stanislavski
    * the twentieth century - Craig, Meyerhold, Artaud, O'Neill, Pirandello, Brecht, Beckett, Müller.

    Anyone interested in theatre throughout history and today will find this an invaluable source of information.

    Introduction; Chapter 1 Ritual theatre; Chapter 2 Theatrum vitae humanae; Chapter 3 The rise of the middle classes and the theatre of illusion; Chapter 4 Dramatising the identity crisis; Chapter 5 Theatre of the ‘new’ man;

    Biography

    Erika Fischer-Lichte is university professor of theatre research at the Free University of Berlin, and president of the International Federation of Theatre Research. Her numerous publications include The Show and the Gaze of Theatre. A European Perspective, 1997.