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Miss Julie and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics)

[PDF] Miss Julie and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics) by Johan August Strindberg; Michael Robinson at Arts-Photography

Description

How did a small; humble folk instrument become an American icon? How did the guitar come to represent freedom; the open road; protest and rebellion; the blues; youth; lost love; and sexuality? In this intensely personal memoir and informative history; National Public Radio commentator and essayist Tim Brookes recounts his quest to build the perfect guitar. Pairing up with a master artisan from the Green Mountains of Vermont; Brookes sees how a rare piece of cherry wood is hued; dovetailed; and worked on with saws; rasps; and files. As his prized instrument takes shape; Brookes also narrates the long and winding history of the guitar in the United States. Arriving with conquistadors and the colonists; the guitar has found itself in an extraordinary variety of hands: miners and society ladies; lumberjacks and presidentsrsquo; wives. In time; the guitar became Americarsquo;s vehicle of self-expression; its modern soundtrack. Guitar is a rare glimpse of one manrsquo;s search for music. It is sure to resonate with musicians and non-musicians alike.


#603931 in eBooks 1998-11-05 1998-11-05File Name: B005EEHM8K


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Themes Of Different NatureBy Say What?In the play. Miss Julie. by August Strindberg. there exist tensions of different levels on the nature of the relationships between Jean. a senior esteemed servant. and the female characters. Miss Julie. a daughter of a wealthy landlord and Kristin. a female mistress. One night. as the relationship between Jean and Miss Julie exceed to a different level. new ideas emerge on the tropes of gender roles. religion. and social classes. At the same time. it becomes essential to note how the tropes are dependent on each other and do not stand on rigid boundaries. In Strindbergs Miss Julie. Kristin unconsciously uses religion as a means of exploitation. hypocrisy. and authority. Strindberg. by focalizing religion through a ldquo;female mistressrdquo;. is able to blur the dividing lines between the social classes and display a direct link that exists between religion and femininity within the play.Overall. a great play and Strindberg integrates many themes of love. religion. sexuality. relationships. social class in his naturalistic style of writing. The play is very unique in its nature and at times very dramatic and extreme in its contents and imagery and ends with much sadness. hence the name "dark tragedy". This translation is very clear and benefical and which greatly aided me in writing my final paper.2 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Overall satisfying purchase.By StaciExactly what I wanted. Arrived promptly. Good translation and interesting introduction. Would definitely recommend to anyone wanting to read Strindberg for pleasure or for school.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A Really Bad Marriage DanceBy David ValentinoFrom this collection. this review is about The Dance of Death (I)Imagine for a moment Hell as a viciously bad and eternal marriage. an unrelenting war between partners yearning for release. nearly achieving that release only to be pulled back into the marriage for another spin on the dance floor of mutual abuse. There. in a nutshell. you have Strindbergs often-produced. greatly admired. and quite influential The Dance of Death (I). Should you ever have the opportunity to see it performed. seize it. for it is more than a play; it is an experience. Better still. if that opportunity presents itself as a small venue. like a one hundred- or fifty-seat house. youll enjoy the play even more.Thats because youll feel as if you are in someones sitting room witnessing the most vicious exchanges between marital partners. To put a finer point on it. it will be like tagging along with George and Martha as they drunkenly thrash each other in Edward Albees Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. a play informed by Strindbergs.Should this all sound off-putting and dreary to you. realize Strindberg had a gift for injecting humor into the most dire of circumstances. Its of the very black type that makes you titter with personal knowledge. or embarrassment. or gratitude you are not his inspiration. especially if those inspirations are playing out the drama at your very feet.On the subject of man and woman together in marriage. in the war between man and woman. he knew of what he wrote. The man managed to alienate three wives (marriages resulting in five children. a boy and four girls). His genius. though. and sharply tuned radar for hypocrisy allowed him a clear view of the relationship and legal problems of his day regarding marriage. divorce. and child custody. all reflected in this play.As for the play. it concerns Edgar. an old army officer. and his wife Alice. a thwarted actress. on the cusp of celebrating their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. They live on an island quarantine station (common in the period to prevent the spread of infectious diseases in the time before antibiotics). Though there is a garrison on the island. they arent very popular. particularly Edgar; the result is no friends and even greater isolation. Edgar speaks constantly of dying. that being his escape hatch from the marriage. Alice continually demonstrates her bitterness about her marriage to him and what he forced her to give up. They have children who do not live with them because they each turned the children against the other. Thus. they find themselves locked in constant warfare. unable to give each other up. except. of course. with the final release of death. Alice does see a chance at freedom when her cousin Kurt shows up. the very cousin who introduced the pair. In Edgars absence. their liking for each other devolves into an all out sexual assault upon each other (quite the spectacle in a small venue. for sure). with Alice seeing Kurt as her salvation. Kurt . however. comes to his senses. leaves them. and they go on as before.Worth reading. and most definitely a must-see if a theatre group mounts a production near you.

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