Research on the Theater of Absurd

Journal: Arts Studies and Criticism DOI: 10.32629/asc.v4i1.1210

Enyue Tong, Li Liu

Longjiang Road Primary School, Chengdu, Sichuan, China

Abstract

This essay aims to do research on one of the most important modern drama movements in Europe — the Theater of Absurd, through doing the background research at first and then comparing works of the same type and period including Nobel Prize work. The authors want more people to get to appreciate the art form of Absurd Drama which precisely reveals very serious social issues fundamentally but through vivid and very comic form. That’s quite novel and classic! After researching on the wide ranges of drama movements in the same period like Environmental Theater, Theater of the Oppressed (TO), Epic Theater, and even Music theater like Off-Off Broadway, the authors finally chose to conduct in-depth research on the Absurd Theater. The background research includes but not limited to the period from1950s to the late 1980s in Europe, and elaborates the development of absurd theory in detail. This paper is represented by Ionesco’s famous drama — Rhinoceros, conducting research from the perspectives of forms, themes, literature technologies and moral to show readers what absurd drama is and its characteristics. Different histories can lead to different forms of literary works including drama. We should always constantly explore new forms of Drama which is extremely interesting and challenging!

Keywords

absurd theater, movement, Rhinoceros

References

[1] Donald James Johnson, Jean Elliott Johnson. The Human Drama World History: from 1900 to the present. America: Markus Wiener; 2011.
[2] Eugène Ionesco, Derek Prouse. Rhinoceros. New York: Grove Press, Inc.; 1960.
[3] Samuel Beckett. Waiting for Godot. America: Grove Press; 2011.
[4] Andrew Matthews, Tony Ross. Julius Caesar. Available from: www.orchardbooks.co.uk [Accessed 8th October 2022].
[5] Jinkai, Huang. A mutated tragicomedy-Analysis of Ionesco’s Rhinoceros. Foreign Literature Review. 2005; 3.
[6] Zheng, Yang. A history of Chinese and foreign drama for children. Beijing: Tiandi Press; 2020.
[7] Martine Essline. Introduction, Absurd Drama. Available from: www.notable-quotes.com [Accessed 16th January 2023].
[8] Albert Camus. The Myth of Sisyphus. London: Penguin Great Ideas/Efinito; 2022.

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