Bertolt Brecht Journals, 1934-55Bloomsbury Publishing, 14.07.2016 - 576 Seiten "Those who dismiss Brecht as a yea-sayer to Stalinism are advised to read these journals and moderate their opinion." (Paul Bailey, Weekend Telegraph)
"A marvellous, motley collage of political ideas, domestic detail, artistic debate, poems, photographs and cuttings from newspapers and magazines, assembled, undoubtedly for posterity by one of the great writers of the century" (New Statesman and Society) |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 80
... Theatre Union production of The Mother, whose closure in midDecember helped to break the company, and for Brecht their disputes fanned out into a lasting quarrel with John Howard Lawson, the Group Theatre and others now concerned in ...
... Theatre Union in 1935, and Herbert Jhering the critic who had promoted him since 1922; then there was the power of Mother Courage, in whose Zurich production the new Deutsches Theater Intendant Wolfgang Langhoff had played Eilif; the ...
... theatre come into being?' Whether or not the new Berlin audience, many of whom had been going to theatres under Hitler, would ever have accepted this is a debatable point. But certainly the East German cultural arbiters would not, for ...
... theatre in exile is keeping the theatre alive. while in moscow maxim vallentin, the onetime director of a berlin agitprop group, has gone over to bourgeois theatre and announced that in art an appeal has to be made to the emotions ...
... theatre, but is supposed to be allowed to direct opera. literature and art are up the creek, political theory has gone to the dogs, what is left is a thin, bloodless, proletarian humanism propagated by officialdom. in an official ...
Inhalt
24 | |
July 1941 to 5 November 1947 | 40 |
December 1947 to 20 October 1948 | 46 |
October 1948 to 18 July 1955 | 47 |
Editorial Notes | 56 |
Select Bibliography | 57 |