Plays: Maria Irene Fornes (PAJ Books) | 
| Author: Maria Irene Fornes Publisher: PAJ Publications Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $2.20 You Save: $12.75 (85%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 373686
Media: Paperback Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 152 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.9 x 0.5
ISBN: 0933826834 Dewey Decimal Number: 812.54 EAN: 9780933826830 ASIN: 0933826834
Publication Date: July 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Writing Present;Stained Edges Our feedback rating says it all: Five star service and fast delivery! We've shipped four million items to happy customers, and have one MILLION unique items ready to ship today!
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Product Description The celebrated playwright, director, translator, lyricist, and seven-time Obie Award winner, has been an influential voice in American theatre for more than four decades and a highly-regarded teacher of playwriting. Includes: Mud, The Danube, Sarita, and The Conduct of Life.
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| Customer Reviews:
homage to Fornes April 27, 2008 Maria Irene Fornes is a terrific playwright - challenging, concrete, innovative - and this volume contains some of her best plays, among them _Conduct of Life_, the innovative greatness of which is apparent even as we read the description of the set. I've been reading Fornes for some fifteen years now, and her plays stand up to the hardest test of all, namely, frequent rereading.
Mud, The Conduct of Life, Danube, & Sarita July 1, 2001 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
The spectrum of her work, included in this book is amazing. Though all the plays have a similar aesthetic, each one has a singular style and tone. I have read some critiques, which suggest that, in this postmodern world, her work might be too obvious. This is laughable though. While her work, as in Mud, has the trappings of simplicity owing to the fact that it is a relatively short piece, the impact and depth of the play is found in the nuances. One must consider Mae. What is her place between a poor, illiterate mate and a pathetically snobbish boor? Both men hold a power over her by virtue of their sex. She has little alternative but to choose from among those two men. But the oppressive constructs she works within also give her an invisible weapon. As a woman, it is expected that she care for them and nurture their health. This is a place of power, if not an obvious one. This play in particular can be looked at from two faces--as allegory or as a psychological portrayal of a woman's mind. This is only a short review, so I must stop soon. But imagine. if a few lines of a review can reveal such complexity of depth then what is it that the postmodern critics find so simple and obvious? Are they that much more brilliant than the rest of us? Or, perhaps, the cynicism of postmodern analysis takes the circumstantial plot as the true thing that Fornes is aiming for. Does a plot need to be as convoluted as the one in the film Magnolia, to convey deep meaning? I enjoyed that film, but I don't feel it captured a tenth of dynamics of what occurrs in in the plays by Fornes. Perhaps that is the curse of Hollywood, however. In which case, I am glad that Fornes is not or ever will be mainstream. Postmoderns may settle for the for the flashy pyro-technic plot, in which there are 20 twists of fate that we must smirk at and a large cast of characters that we must feel sick for, but in Fornes' work there is real fire--ignited from condensed intensity. I strongly recommend this book.
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