Three comedies : Behind the scenes in Eden, Rigmaroles, the other William / by Jaime Salom ; edited by Gregary J. Racz and translated by Marion Peter Holt, Gregary J. Racz, & Phyllis Zatlin.
2004
PQ6669.A55 A24 2004 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
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Details
Title
Three comedies : Behind the scenes in Eden, Rigmaroles, the other William / by Jaime Salom ; edited by Gregary J. Racz and translated by Marion Peter Holt, Gregary J. Racz, & Phyllis Zatlin.
Author
Uniform Title
Dramas. Selections. English
ISBN
0870817817 (paperback)
9780870817816 (paperback)
0870817809 (hardcover)
9780870817809 (hardcover)
9780870817816 (paperback)
0870817809 (hardcover)
9780870817809 (hardcover)
Publication Details
Boulder : University Press of Colorado, ©2004.
Language
English
Description
227 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Call Number
PQ6669.A55 A24 2004
Dewey Decimal Classification
862/.64
Summary
"Three Comedies represents the first English-language collection of plays by Jaime Salom, one of Spain's most important contemporary dramatists. His forty-plus works encompass an impressive array of subgenres, including domestic dramas, mysteries, political allegories, historical comedies, metaphysical meditations, and tales of Spanish life. Best known for his veiled critiques of Francisco Franco's regime, Salom went on to explore less overtly politicized themes following the dictator's death in 1975. This new volume features a trio of comedies from his later phase that offer insight into life under the eased restraints of a nominally democratic Spain."
"Included in this collection are Behind the Scenes in Eden (1978), a retelling of events in Eden from a feminist perspective; Rigmaroles (1990), which recounts Golden Age author Juan Timoneda's domestic turmoil precipitated by a change in political winds; and The Other William (1998), in which Shakespeare appears as an opportunistic actor taking credit for someone else's writing. All three comedies revel in the foibles of protagonists who, in their search for self-determination, never quite manage to escape the specter of tyrannical authority."--Jacket.
"Included in this collection are Behind the Scenes in Eden (1978), a retelling of events in Eden from a feminist perspective; Rigmaroles (1990), which recounts Golden Age author Juan Timoneda's domestic turmoil precipitated by a change in political winds; and The Other William (1998), in which Shakespeare appears as an opportunistic actor taking credit for someone else's writing. All three comedies revel in the foibles of protagonists who, in their search for self-determination, never quite manage to escape the specter of tyrannical authority."--Jacket.
Note
"Included in this collection are Behind the Scenes in Eden (1978), a retelling of events in Eden from a feminist perspective; Rigmaroles (1990), which recounts Golden Age author Juan Timoneda's domestic turmoil precipitated by a change in political winds; and The Other William (1998), in which Shakespeare appears as an opportunistic actor taking credit for someone else's writing. All three comedies revel in the foibles of protagonists who, in their search for self-determination, never quite manage to escape the specter of tyrannical authority."--Jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 37-40).
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Behind the scenes in Eden
Rigmaroles
Other William.
Rigmaroles
Other William.