1st Edition

The Routledge Anthology of US Drama: 1898-1949

Edited By Joshua Polster Copyright 2016
    1036 Pages
    by Routledge

    1036 Pages
    by Routledge

    The first half of the Twentieth Century was a vibrant period for U.S. theatre. As the United States emerged as a significant military, economic, political and cultural power, so its theatre began to distinguish itself from the prevailing European model. The plays and dramatic texts in this anthology demonstrate the vital and volatile relationship between U.S. theatre, its society, and the ways in which that theatre has both supported and challenged prevailing systems of thought and action.

    This collection is organized around key thematic perspectives from colonialism to psychoanalysis, viewing the artistic output of this era through the socio-political events and controversies that shaped it. Each play is accompanied by a critical commentary from a leading scholar and a set of archive source materials, including playbills, production shots, reviews, essays, poems, newspaper articles and official documents. These supplements bring to life the rich and diverse theatre cultures that operated in the United States during this period and explore the essential ways that these cultural artifacts engaged with the national debates that surrounded them.

    The plays themselves both support and challenge the existing canon of U.S. dramatic literature; a selection that speaks not only to aesthetic innovation, but also to the critical moments of political change and national definition that helped to shape the United States. From Miller, Williams and O’Neill to Angelina Grimké, David Belasco and Mae West, this is the ideal collection for any course in U.S. theatre.

     

    Introduction – Joshua Polster

    Part 1 – Colonialism

    Colonial and Native Rule in Performance

    1. Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show

    2. Madame Butterfly – David Belasco

    3. The Pan-American Exposition

    4. The Great Divide – William Vaughan Moody

    Part 2 – Race and Ethnicity

    Minstrels and Tom Shows

    5. Uncle Tom’s Cabin

    Anti-Lynching Plays

    6. Rachel – Angelina Weld Grimké

    Immigration and Vaudeville

    7. Vaudeville Humour – Ed Lowry

    8. I’m Going to Mexico – Netty and Jesus Rodriguez

    9. Te Ata

    Part 3 – Gender and Sexuality

    Feminism and Feminist Theatre

    10. Trifles – Susan Glaspell

    11. How Poor Women Prostitute Themselves – Luisa Capetillo

    The Sexual Revolution and Broadway

    12. Sex – Mae West

    13. Machinal – Sophie Treadwell

    Part 4 – Economic Structure

    The Great Depression and the Workers’ Theatre Movement

    14. Scottsboro, Limited – Langston Hughes

    15. Waiting for Lefty – Clifford Odets

    The New Deal and the Federal Theatre Project

    16. The Revolt of the Beavers – Oscar Saul and Lou Lantz

    17. One Third of a Nation – Arthur Arent

    Part 5 – Systems of Government

    The Rise of Fascism, Isolationist and Interventionist Theatre

    18. It Can’t Happen Here – Sinclair Lewis and John C. Moffitt

    19. The Skin of Our Teeth – Thornton Wilder

    20. Watch on the Rhine – Lillian Hellmann

    Part 6 – Queer and Psychoanalytic Theory

    Performing the Closet: Coded Gay Dramas

    21. Summer and Smoke – Tennessee Williams

    The Rise of U.S. Psychoanalysis and Freud Onstage

    22. The Iceman Cometh – Eugene O’Neill

    23. Death of a Salesman – Arthur Miller

    Biography

    Joshua Polster

    "This volume distinguishes itself by coupling an effective and diverse survey of US drama with invaluable critical and primary sources. Its supplementary materials provide a rich context for the plays and performances included, and are helpfully accessible to undergraduate students."

    • Lindsay Hunter, SUNY – Buffalo, USA

    "What makes The Routledge Anthology of US Drama 1898-1949 extraordinary are the supplemental materials - the "artifacts of culture" - which contextualize our performance practices within a given moment without relying on the mythologizing meta-narratives of the progression of our dramatic art. Rather, Polster offers an interdisciplinary approach that provides a new direction for the ways in which we can teach (and learn) about our dramatic arts and ourselves. This anthology may be the most important, at the very least most comprehensive, collection of plays, essays, historical records, and artifacts focused on this era." 

    • John Patrick Bray, University of Georgia, USA