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The Drama and Theatre of Annie Baker
Hardback
Main Details
Description
In the first book-length study of Annie Baker, one of the most critically acclaimed playwrights in the United States today and winner of the 2014 Pulitzer Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship and a MacArthur "genius" grant, Amy Muse analyzes Baker's plays and other work. She illuminates their intellectual and ethical themes and issues by contextualizing them with the other works of theatre, art, theology, and psychology that Baker read while writing them. This volume argues that Baker is finely attuned to the language of the everyday: imperfect, halting, marked with unexpressed desires, banalities, and silence. Called "antitheatrical," these plays draw us back to the essence of theatre: space, time, and story, sitting with others in real time, witnessing the dramatic in the ordinary lives of ordinary people. Baker's revolution for the stage has been to slow it down and bring us all into the mystery and pleasure of attention. Through close discussions of Baker's plays, this book immerses readers in her use of everyday language, her themes of loneliness, desire, empathy, and storytelling, and her innovations with stage time. Enriched by interviews and engaging essays by three scholars, Thomas Butler, Jeanmarie Higgins, and Katherine Weiss, this is a companionable guide for students of American literature and theatre studies, which deepens their knowledge and appreciation of Baker's dramatic invention.
Author Biography
Amy Muse is Professor of English at the University of St. Thomas, USA. She is the author of The Drama and Theatre of Sarah Ruhl (Methuen Drama, 2018) and essays on dramatic literature, intimate theatre, and travel that have appeared in The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Text & Presentation, Romanticism: The Journal of Romantic Culture & Criticism, Frontiers, and The Journal of Greek Media and Culture.
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