From Class to Caste in American Drama: Political and Social Themes Since the 1930sBloomsbury Academic, 21.03.1991 - 301 Seiten The American political theatre from the Depression to the present is the subject of this unique new study. Richard Scharine examines issues that shaped the development of the United States during this period, as they were portrayed in selected American plays first produced between 1933 and 1985. Drawing upon fifty years of social, political, and theatrical history, he provides an understanding of the events, ideas, and emotional matrices out of which the plays were born, as well as offering an analysis of human documents that are a reflection of the political events of a time. Along the way, Scharine illustrates how the dramatic representation of American inequalities has evolved in recent decades from the concerns of class to the way class is predetermined by caste. |
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... France , with Germany and England drawn into the war by treaty commitments . Most imaginative are Men Must Fight , which depicts a 1940 U.S. war with a united South America , fighting with Japanese support , and The Ghost of Yankee ...
... France , nominal allies to the Czechs , vacillated and appealed to the United States . On September 26 , President Roosevelt sent telegrams urging peace to the heads of all the states involved . At the same time , he refused a French ...
... France . To achieve the former , Japan would require a non - Communist Southeast Asia as a trading partner . 14 Meanwhile , if France was to play a leading role in the new European Defense Community , it must avoid being stalemated in ...
Inhalt
The Great DepressionSocial Themes in the Theatrical | 1 |
Labor and the Left | 9 |
OneThird of a Nation | 17 |
Urheberrecht | |
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