Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf Edward Albee. The US at the time – social context The US was going through a period of relative innocence with JF Kennedy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Elements of the Short Story
Advertisements

Love & Marriage Shakespeares Time vs. Today. Paris- Scene 2 Paris, a relative of the Prince, will ask for Juliets hand in marriage in Act I, Scene 2 Heres.
Emerged in the late 40’s and early 50’s Authors have accepted a godless, meaningless universe The individual is essentially isolated and alone. There.
 Writers use parallel structure when they put two or three words or phrases of the same part of speech together in a series.  I think this tension between.
That Guy who Wrote The Crucible…. Arthur Miller Raised during the Great Depression in New York City Raised during the Great Depression in New York City.
Image courtesy of Wikipedia via the U.S. Department of State "The American Dream is the largely unacknowledged screen in front of which all American writing.
Edward Albee.   Born in Washington, DC on March 12, 1928   Adopted by the rich Albee family involved in the theater bussines   Dismissed from almost.
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Presented by: Hiyam M. Fayad Samar Ishaer.
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Act III. Act III, Scene I  Martha: a woman full of desperation and self-pity.  We see her starved for affection.  Martha’s.
The Art of Drama Dramatic Structure Production of a Play American Drama Twentieth-Century Realism Expressionist Drama Contemporary Drama Practice Feature.
Death and the Maiden Style and Form.
Realism and the Modern Theatre
To view BROWSE and highlight FULL SCREEN
By John Steinbeck.  Born in Salinas, California, Steinbeck is one of the most widely read and influential American authors of the 20 th century.  He.
Edward Albee By Kayla Sanford.
Short Story Elements. SIX major elements Setting Setting Conflict Conflict Point of View Point of View Plot Plot Character Character Theme Theme.
THE THEATRE OF THE ABSURD
Notes on Eveline. The story starts with Eveline’s looking out of the window and remembering her past; her memories are marked by the shift in time (“One.
DRAMA Derives from the Greek word “dran,” which means “to do” or “to perform”
The Theatre of the Absurd. Outline  Greek roots  Camus’s essay “Myth” and Esslin  Popular:  Freud  WWII (nuclear)  Beckett  Traditional vs. Absurd.
THEATRE OF THE ABSURD. The term (now genre)Theatre of the Absurd was coined by critic Martin Esslin to bring attention to a group of playwrights whose.
Existentialism Expounded
Actor’s Studio – April 8 th, ABSURDISM Let’s face it… it’s just plain weird.
Making your own kimono! KABUKI THEATRE. Kabuki One of three types of Japanese theatre Noh, Bunraku, and Kabuki Often resembles an American musical Came.
17 th October th February 2005 By Zoë, Leanna, Rachael and Megan.
ENGL 6480/7480, Studies in Contemporary Literature: Mad Men and the Sixties Dr. David Lavery Summer 2015 Theatre of the 1960s.
By Fred Swan. The Early Years Samuel Barclay Beckett was born on good Friday, the 13 th of April 1906 near Dublin, Ireland He lived a middle class life.
The “isms” Drama 1 Europe in the 19th Century n From the Italian Renaissance on, pictoral illusion (“make it pretty”) dominated. n Melodrama and Romanticism.
9th Grade Literature Coach Hunt & Ms. Roberts
Nicole Whitmarsh.  This ad is promoting the American Apparel brand.  The target audience includes men and women aged approximately 15-35, as that.
Edith Wharton and The Age of Innocence by James Vineyard Sachse High School ELA Department.
Ethan Frome Edith Wharton Introduction Background Discussion Starters.
The American Dream America has long been known as a land of opportunity. Out of that thinking comes the “American Dream,” the idea that anyone can ultimately.
Writing in Context Identity & Belonging.  The idea of identity & belonging is both complex and problematic.  What do the concepts of “identity” and.
Death of a Salesman And The American Dream. Moonlight: Ahlam Abdullah Ali Hanan Al-Gahtani Khoulod Al-Nahdi Shaza Al-Zahrani Tahani Al-Ghamdi.
All My Sons An Introduction. Arthur Miller - Biography Arthur Asher Miller (October 17, 1915 – February 10, 2005). Miller was an extremely important American.
Death of a Salesman By Arthur Miller. Arthur Miller-Background October 17, 1915 – February 10, 2005 American playwright who combined in his works social.
GOOD MORNING! “We must stop talking about the American dream and start listening to the dreams of Americans.” ~Max Beerbohm 6 Nov Please take out.
Answering a passage-based question: Prose and Drama Ask yourself: Where in the text does this passage come from? What has happened before it? What happens.
Georgia Authors Vocabulary. prior knowledge Definition Preexisting attitudes, experiences, and knowledge on a topic or event. Example Dogs love treats.
All My Sons An Introduction. Arthur Miller - Biography Arthur Asher Miller (October 17, 1915 – February 10, 2005). Miller was an extremely important American.
Ernest James Gaines A Lesson Before Dying. Author’s Background Ernest James Gaines was born on January 15, 1933 on the River Lake Plantation in Pointe.
Best known for his tragedy Death of a Salesman
Sonya Burkalyova 11 B FORM. ( ) Major plays The Glass Menagerie A Streetcar Named Desire The Rose Tattoo Baby Doll Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Suddenly,
Theater History AMERICAN THEATER HISTORY. American Non-Musical Theatre  First original theater, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, first staged in  Eugene O’Neill.
Short Story Unit A. The theme in a story is its underlying message, or 'big idea.' what critical belief about life is the author trying to convey in the.
Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? VATE REVISION LECTURE Presented by Christine Lambrianidis Senior English and Literature Teacher, Point Cook.
DRAMMA STUDY II Psychological Analysis Of Peter’s And Jerry’s Character In “The Zoo Story” by Edward Albee Analyzed by: Dicka Akbari, Noviyanti Agil Pamungkas,
JOHN STEINBECK OF MICE AND MEN BACKGROUND STEINBECK—HIS LIFE AND WORKS STEINBECK—HIS LIFE AND WORKS  BORN IN SALINAS, CALIFORNIA (1902)  FIRST THREE.
Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. About the Author August Wilson ( ) -Wrote a series of ten plays depicting the African American experience throughout.
The Greatest Living American Playwright By Kimberly Freeman.
Death of a Salesman Success and Happiness. Answer the following question in a few brief sentences: What is your own definition of success? Does it involve.
Background information for A Raisin in the Sun. The Harlem Renaissance  The Harlem Renaissance was a literary, artistic, and intellectual movement that.
1 John Steinbeck & Of Mice and Men. 2 Topics of Discussion John Steinbeck’s Biography America in the Great Depression and Dust Bowl The Novel: Of Mice.
Short Story Elements SETTING -- The time and location in which a story takes place is called the setting. For some stories the setting is very important,
Theatre of the Absurd and WAITING FOR GODOT. Theatre of the Absurd coined by Martin Esslin in 1955  Defined: “drama using the abandonment of conventional.
POSTMODERNISM IN 20TH-CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE
Formely known as Everette LeRoi Jones By Danielle Jones.
Edward Albee. Basic Information on the Author The author of Whose Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is Edward Franklin Albee III. The author of Whose Afraid of.
Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton
Welcome to Ridiculousness
AO3 20 marks Demonstrate the significance
Modern American Drama “A Streetcar Named Desire” By Tennessee Williams
So what is CONTEXT? Historical Political Social Biographical
American Drama Less popular Genre of literature
Good morning! Please take out your notebook and write down the learning target! Turn your homework into the box, please! Learning Target: Describe characters.
Oral Tradition in American Literature
Text: Raisin in the Sun Author: Lorraine Hansberry
THEATRE OF THE ABSURD.
Presentation transcript:

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf Edward Albee

The US at the time – social context The US was going through a period of relative innocence with JF Kennedy at the helm The world was peaceful (largely) American traditional values appeared to be unshakeable However, underneath there was a degree of agitation as the Americans had a tense relationship with the Russians, blacks in America were trying to end racial discrimination and a number of writers were questioning their country’s values

Albee’s play It opened on Broadway on October 12 th 1962 and it was one of the first to articulate these ideas of dissatisfaction that were coming into public discourse It critically analysed the values of family, marriage and success and suggested these could have been created in part to escape from a reality that was not so happy Some found the play perverse, others a masterpiece – debate raged about it It was chosen for the Pulitzer Prize for Literature but the overseeing body (Columbia University) decided the language and taboo subjects made it too controversial to be given the award

Albee – the man He was adopted as a baby in 1928 to a family who was very wealthy. He lived in NYC. His childhood was pure luxury – holidays overseas, tutors, servants, many cars, riding lessons This did not give him complacency. It made him criticise, with his pen, the moral and spiritual damage inflicted by people who have material wealth and who chase the ‘American dream’

Albee continued… He lived in Greenwich Village when he was older and, at 30, finally published a play that garnered him world wide attention (The Zoo Story – a one act play) He was writing at the time of Tennessee Williams and Arthur Miller – formidable competition These writers all worked in realistic idiom – where the world onstage mirrored the real world They told stories that shouted the idea of men and women being responsible for their own fate

Theatre of the Absurd These writers and others in Europe (such as Samuel Beckett) at the time responded to the world differently and wanted the audience to be shaken out of complacency about their world They wanted the audience to feel a deep sense of anguish at the absurdity of the human condition – hence, Absurdists

Characteristics of this theatre type Speech is often confusing, not logical Language is often filled with jargon, cliches, nonsense. This is an attempt to raise the idea that language itself is quite empty and it cannot help to communicate real, deep feelings They are often a series of images or incidents that represent the human condition as the author sees it The plays are often funny, suggesting laughter is a response to the pain we have in life