1st Edition

Routledge Revivals: David Mamet (1985)

By Christopher Bigsby Copyright 1985
    146 Pages
    by Routledge

    146 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1985, C.W.E Bigsby examines the career and work of playwright David Mamet. Bigsby shows that Mamet is a fierce social critic, indicting an America corrupted at its core by myths of frontier individualism and competitive capitalism. Mamet has created plays whose bleak social vision and ironic metaphysics are redeemed, if at all, by the power of imagination. No American playwright before him has displayed the same sensitivity to language, detecting lyricism in the brutal incoherencies of every day speech and investing with meaning a contemporary aphasia. Few have offered dramatic metaphors of such startling and disturbing originality. Bigsby’s study is the first book to provide a thorough account of David Mamet’s life and career, as well as close analyses of individual plays.

     

    General Editor’s Preface;  Acknowledgements;  A note on the texts;  1. Beginnings  2. Story and anti-story  3. Sexual Perversity in Chicago, The Woods  4. American Buffalo  5. The Water Engine, A Life in the Theatre  6. The Culture of Narcissism: Edmond  7. Glengarry, Glen Ross  8. Conclusions;  Notes;  Bibliography

     

    Biography

    Christopher Bigsby, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the Royal Society of Arts, is an award winning academic, novelist and biographer.