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“American characteristics and other essays” (Publication, 1979)

Year

1979

Text

Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays. (New York, N.Y. : Harper & Row, 1979). (Wild17)

Type

Publication

Contributors (1)

Wilder, Thornton  (Madison, Wisc. 1897-1975 Hamden, Conn.) : Schriftsteller, Dramatiker

Subjects

Literature : Occident : United States of America : Prose / References / Sources

Chronology Entries (7)

# Year Text Linked Data
1 1929 Wilder, Thornton. Sir Philip Sassoon's 'The third route'. (1929). In : Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays [ID D30361].
I am driven to thinking of an even remoter future : of a time when the English and Chinese languages will be mixed, as oil and water mix ; when scholars will deny that Lear and Twelfth Night are by the same hand…
2 1938 Wilder, Thornton. Our town : a play in three acts. (New York, N.Y. : Harper & Row, 1938). [Uraufführung McCarter Theater, Princeton, New Jersey, January 22, 1938].
Wilder, Thornton. A preface for Our town. (1938). In : Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays [ID D30361]. [Not published].
In the Spanish theater Lope de Vega put a rug in the middle of the scene – it was a raft in mid-ocean bearing a castaway. The Elizabethans, the Chinese used similar devices.

Sekundärliteratur
Y.T. Luk : Wilder uses no front curtain, no scenery, and no properties, except a few chairs and ladders ; he has a Stage Manager come out to chat with the audience and point out what they are to imagine on the stage, to move chairs, and occasionally to become a character of the performance – the soda fountain clerk as well as the minister of wedding. He learned this theatricalist mode from Peking opera, with which he was quite familiar. From the non-illusionist approach in Chinese theatre, Wilder recognized that even the important events of everyday life can be presented by actors on an open platform, reacting not to a realistic setting but to the private thoughts and personal relations of the characters in the fictive world on that platform. From this Chinese make-believe on the stage, he realized the fundamental conditions of drama – that is, that the theatre is an art which reposes upon the work of many collaborators ; it is addressed to a group mind based on a pretense, its very nature calls out a multiplication of pretenses, and its action takes place in a perpetually present time. The conventionalized performance of Chinese acting, in spite of its blatant theatricality, convinced him that convention was very important in the interaction between actors and the audience, that it was an agreed-upon falsehood, a permitted lie to provoke collaborative activity of the spectator's imagination and raise the action from the specific to the general.

Chen Xiaoming : Like Gao Xingjian's Wildman, a Chinese play, Wilder's Our town, an 'Oriental' play, achieves an epic dimension by showing, in the first act, a flashback scene in the past - 'a day in our town', May 7, 1901 – an ordinary day that everyone of us lives. Both plays share the same timeless, episodic structure that presents a macrocosmic view of life. Both plays constantly employ the present time of the play to symbolize a larger temporal view of past, present, and future. Both plays are about much more than simply Emily and George, or an ecologist and a Wildman. Both are in some sense stories of mankind, of its historical past and contemporary reality, its struggle against time and its efforts to preserve natural life and cultural heritage. Both plays are narrated by insightful observers – the Stage Manager and the Ecologist – who convey to the audience their apprehensions over the meaning of life and their nostalgic feelings for an irreversible past.
Haberman, Donald C. The plays of Thornton Wilder : a critical study. (Middletown, Conn. : Wesleyan University Press, 1969).
Haberman claims that Wilder demanded from the actors of Our town that 'they attempt something like Mei Lanfang's expression of a reality above the casual and a permanence beyond the brevity of each performance.

Lee Sang-kyong : Wilder verzichtet bewusst auf Kulisse und grosse Requisiten, um das Drama von seinem Illusionscharacter zu befreien und der Einbildungskraft des Zuschauers freien Spielraum zu lass. So genügten ihm, entsprechend der Nô-Bühne und der Bühne des chinesischen Theaters, einige Stühle und Tische als Bühnenrequisiten, um das Wesentliche der Realität darzustellen.

Lifton, Paul. Thornton Wilder's minimalist plays : mingling Eastern and Western traditions. In : Crosscurrents in the drama : East and West. Ed., Stanley Vincent Longman.

(Tuscaloosa, AL : Southeastern Theatre Conference and the University of Alabama Press, 1998). (Theatre symposium (Tuscaloosa, Ala.) ; vol. 6, 1998).
http://books.google.ch/books?id=UT8yEd2CVssC&pg=PA76&lpg=PA76&dq=thornton+wilder
+chinese&source=bl&ots=oZwJuSBxi&sig=rK6z_WTq8khEVMZPfh9F49U8zgM&hl=de&sa=
X&ei=jMgRUrqOCImIhQfYroCQDQ&ved=0CFUQ6AEwBTgU#v=onepage&q=thornton%20
wilder%20chinese&f=false.

Paul
Lifton : While he was working on Our town, Thornton Wilder describes the play in a 1937 postcard to a friend as utilizing 'the technique of Chinese drama', and the 'Chinese' features of the piece did not escape the the notice of reviewers of the original production. Several of them compared it to The yellow jacket. Many other critics also identified the Stage Manager as a variant of the Chinese property man and other features of the pantomime, as 'Chinese' or quasi-Chinese as well.
Wilder's interest in pantomime was apparently sparked by a performance by Mei Lanfang. Several of Wilder's shorter play in the minimalist vein also reflect Mei Lanfang's influence and exhibit parallels, too, with other Asian traditional theatres besides the Chinese. On the other hand, he appears to have been uninterested in or unaware of many nonminimalist aspects of Asian theatre. His borrowing was always highly selective. Certainly the lavish, symbolic, and highly theatrical costumes and makeup or masks, the extraordinary and specialized vocal techniques, the exaggerated or symbolic gestures, and the acrobatic or the unnaturally restrained movements of the nô, kabuki, and Chinese opera find no counterparts in his dramatic universe.
  • Document: Luk, Y.T. Chinese theatricalism and modern drama. In : Comparative literature studies ; vol. 24, no 3 (1987). [Betr. Bertolt Brecht, Thornton Wilder, Jean Genet, Luigi Pirandello]. (LukY.T.1, Publication)
  • Document: Chen, Xiaomei. Occidentalism : a theory of counter-discourse in post-Mao China. (New York, N.Y. : Oxford University Press, 1995). [2nd rev. and expanded ed. (Lanham, Md. : Rowman and Littlefield, 2002)]. S. 121, 123. (CheX5, Publication)
  • Document: Lee, Sang-kyong. Ostasien und Amerika : Begegnungen in Drama und Theater. (Würzburg : Königshausen & Neumann, 1998). [Betr. u.a. Thornton Wilder]. S. 109. (LeeS2, Publication)
  • Person: Wilder, Thornton
3 1941 Wilder, Thornton. Some thoughts on playwriting. (1941) In : Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays. (New York, N.Y. : Harper & Row, 1979).
The modern world is inclined to laugh condescendingly at the fact that in the plays of Racine and Corneille the gods and heroes of antiquity were dressed like the courtiers under Louis XIV ; that in the Elizabethan Age scenery was replaced by placards notifying the audience of the location ; and that a whip in the hand and a jogging motion of the body indicated that a man was on horseback in the Chinese theater, these devices did not spring from naïveté, however, but from the vitality of the public imagination in those days and from an instinctive feeling as to where the essential and where the inessential lay in drama.
4 1952 Wilder, Thornton. Toward an American language. (1952). In : Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays [ID D30361].
In France life and conversation and love itself seem to us to be overruled by a network of conventions as intricate as a ballet or a game ; just so the Chinese built walls of ceremonial behind which they could hide from the piercing intelligence of their neighbors.
5 1952 Wilder, Thornton. The American loneliness. (1952). In : Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays [ID D30361].
The doctrine of moderation and the golden mean may have flourished in Rome and in China (overcrowded and overgoverned countries), but they do not flourish here, save as counsels of despair.
6 1955 Wilder, Thornton. John Marin 1870-1953. In : Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays [ID D30361].
The great artist teaches us a new entrance into the visible world, a new homage, and a new knowledge. Each of the master landscapists has informed our eyes… the geography, the geology, the history of the earth that lies behind the surface of city and valley ; the Chinese masters, the landscape as background for a philosopher's meditation…
7 1957 Wilder, Thornton. Preface to three plays : Our town, The skin of our teeth, The matchmaker. (1957). In : Wilder, Thornton. American characteristics and other essays. (New York, N.Y. : Harper & Row, 1979).
In Chinese drama a character, by straddling a stick, conveys to us that he is on horseback. In almost every No play of the Japanese an actor makes a tour of the stage and we know that he is making a long journey.

Cited by (1)

# Year Bibliographical Data Type / Abbreviation Linked Data
1 Zentralbibliothek Zürich Organisation / ZB