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Sean O'Casey

    30 de marzo de 1880 – 18 de septiembre de 1964

    Sean O'Casey fue un importante dramaturgo y memorialista irlandés, reconocido por sus representaciones de las clases trabajadoras de Dublín. Surgido de una juventud desafiante, fue en gran medida autodidacta, un trasfondo que moldeó profundamente su voz literaria. Sus obras de teatro, a menudo de visión tragicómica, exhiben una versatilidad extravagante que transmite una gran amplitud de mente. Un socialista comprometido, el trabajo de O'Casey continúa resonando con la vida vívida que conoció tan íntimamente.

    Sean O'Casey
    Three Dublin Plays
    The Playboy of the Western World and Two Other Irish Plays
    The Silver Tassie
    Autobiographies II
    Juno and the Paycock (Drama)
    Three more plays : The Silver Tassie ; Purple Dust ; Red Roses for Me
    • Juno and the Paycock (Drama)

      • 160 páginas
      • 6 horas de lectura

      The most famous play by this remarkable Irish dramatist. Juno and the Paycock has been produced throughout the world and offers a compelling look at the family conflicts of struggling Irish matriarch Juno Boyle's Herculean attempts to keep her children safe and her husband "Captain" Jack Boyle sober despite his foolish schemes and the ongoing "troubles" in early 20th century Dublin.

      Juno and the Paycock (Drama)
    • Autobiographies II

      • 518 páginas
      • 19 horas de lectura

      Looks at Sean O'Casey's young (pre-writing) life that takes shape amid the extraordinary tumult of Ireland in the early twentieth century, thus leading him into the fray of the Easter Rising of 1916.

      Autobiographies II
    • Everyone but the shattered war veterans dance and forget. Peppered with acrid wit and dark vaudeville humour, The Silver Tassie, Sean O'Casey's powerful anti-war play of 1928, receives a major revival at the National Theatre in April 2014.

      The Silver Tassie
    • A murderer becomes the toast of the village as his charm negates his crime. A young countess saves her tenants from starvation, but only by selling her soul to the Devil. The sleepy parish of Nyadnanave sees a vision of a cockerel that dares the inhabitants to break the shackles of Church and State. All these plays were met with moral outrage and rioting in their native Ireland.Yeats's 'The Countess Cathleen' (1892), J. M. Synge's 'The Playboy of the Western World' (1907) and O'Casey's 'Cock-a-doodle Dandy' (1949) emerged from a period of traumatic change for Ireland. While the plays bear witness to the immmense social upheavals of the turn of the twentieth century, they also represent a new age of Irish drama that rose from the turmoil, and their lessons ring true to this day.

      The Playboy of the Western World and Two Other Irish Plays
    • This volume contains the three plays commonly recognized as the height of O'Casey's achievement as a playwright. His tragi-comedy has relevance to the violent politics in the North and the post-nationalist bewilderments in the Republic.

      Three Dublin Plays
    • A play set in the tenements of Dublin in 1922, just after the outbreak of the Irish Civil War, revolving around the misfortunes of the dysfunctional Boyle family ("Juno and the paycock"). A tragicomedy set during the Irish War of Independence centering on the mistaken identity of a building tenant who is thought to be an IRA assassin ("The shadow of a gunman"). A play set in Dublin addressing the 1916 Easter Rising ("The plough and the stars")

      Three plays. Juno and the Paycock. The Shadow of a Gunman. The Plough and the Stars.
    • The most famous play by this remarkable Irish dramatist. Juno and the Paycock has been produced throughout the world and offers a compelling look at the family conflicts of struggling Irish matriarch Juno Boyle's Herculean attempts to keep her children safe and her husband "Captain" Jack Boyle sober despite his foolish schemes and the ongoing "troubles" in early 20th century Dublin.

      Juno and the Paycock
    • Story of the Irish Citizen Army, The

      • 84 páginas
      • 3 horas de lectura

      Focusing on the Irish Citizen Army's formation during the Dublin strike of 1913-1914, the author, a key participant in the movement, provides a vigorous account of labor's influence in Ireland. He offers a strong perspective on the workers' relationship with the Nationalist movement. The book features character portraits of notable figures such as Larkin, Connolly, and the Countess Markiewicz, while revealing previously unknown details about the interactions between the Citizen Army and the Volunteers.

      Story of the Irish Citizen Army, The
    • The Shadow of a Gunman is a play set during the Irish War of Independence. It centres on a building tenant who is mistaken for an IRA assassin.

      Shadow of a Gunman