• Handke Plays: "Offending the Audience", "My Foot My Tutor", "Self Accusation", "Kaspar", " Lake Constance", "They are Dying Out" v. 1 See large image

    Handke Plays: "Offending the Audience", "My Foot My Tutor", "Self Accusation", "Kaspar", " Lake Constance", "They are Dying Out" v. 1 (Contemporary Dramatists Series) (Paperback) By (author) Peter Handke

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    Short Description for Handke Plays: "Offending the Audience", "My Foot My Tutor", "Self Accusation", "Kaspar", " Lake Constance", "They are Dying Out" v. 1 This volume contains Handke's work from the 1970s. It includes "Kaspar", in which the playwright explores the power of language as a means of oppression - a means of creating artificial uniformity by teaching people to comprehend the world only in terms of the speech patterns they are given.
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Full description for Handke Plays: "Offending the Audience", "My Foot My Tutor", "Self Accusation", "Kaspar", " Lake Constance", "They are Dying Out" v. 1

  • Peter Handke's work is amongst the most strikingly original of all post-war European writing (Times Educational Supplement) Offending the Audience is "a dissection of our expectations about what ought to happen in the theatre." Self-Accusation is "a cunning and ironic attack on bureaucratic moral guilt" (Observer); Kaspar is based on the true story of Kaspar Hauser, a sixteen year old boy who appeared from nowhere in Nuremberg in 1828 and who had to be taught to speak from scratch. Handke's play is a downright attack on the way language is used by a corrupt society to depersonalise the individual; My Foot My Tutor is a mime for two actors - "Handke has here written an hour-long play without words that may at first look like a piece of audience-provocation but that finishes up as sheer theatrical poetry" (Guardian). In The Ride across Lake Constance, a group of characters (known only by the names of the actors who perform the parts) talk and play games together and skate over the thin ice that separates them from unspoken danger. "Intensely theatrical...an author for whom playwriting seems akin to tightrope walking" (The Times). They Are Dying Out puts the pillars of the bourgeoisie under the microscope to reveal an alien race, suffocated by rationality, unable to cope with untamed subjective impulses and shows an "uncanny knack for making the familiar seem strange" (Plays and Players).