1st Edition

David Rudkin: Sacred Disobedience An Expository Study of his Drama 1959-1994

By David Ian Rabey, David I. Rabey Copyright 1998
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    Dr. Rabey's profound critical study of David Rudkin's drama constitutes an in-depth evaluation of this unique dramatist, re-assessed in the light of his bi-sexuality and Anglo-Irish origins.
    This key study includes insights from noted performers of Rudkin's work, including Ian Hogg, Peter McEnery, Ian McDiarmid, Gerard Murphy, and Charlotte Cornwell. It is a fully authorized study with exclusive reference to archival material which includes some frank and urgent interview contributions from the dramatist himself, who is usually deemed reclusive. It is enhanced by Dr. Rabey's own experience of Wales, Ireland, and the English Black Country for his exposition of Rudkin's mythic sense of Celtic and Mercian history.

    Introduction to the Series1. Introduction: To Blazing Point 2. Locate, Separate, Eliminate 3. Mind-Forged Manacles and Demonic Release 4. Stolen Future, Discarded Self 5. A Sense of Place 6. Stolen Flames 7. Burning Questions 8. Artemis Rising 9. Sublime Monstrosity 10. Transforming Transgressions 11. Work in Progress 12. Indefinition of a ManAppendix: TestimoniesIan Hogg, Charlotte Cornwall, Lynda Murtagh, Peter McEnery, Gerard Murphy, Ian McDiarmidDavid Rudkin: A ChronologyNotesIndex

    Biography

    David Rudkin is a leading British dramatist, author of Afore Night Come, Cries from Casement as his Bones are Brought to Dublin, Ashes, Penda's Fen, The Sons of Light, The Triumph of Death, The Saxon Shore, Symphonie Pathetique, House of Character, Blodwen, and Home from Rachel's Marriage.
    Authoritative in its reference to all Rudkin's work for theatre, cinema, radio and television, this profound critical study aims to prompt a reappraisal of his work in current dramatic, theoretical, and sexual contexts.