The glass menagerie Tennessee Williams;edited & with an introduction by Harold Bloom
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Contents:
Lester A. Beaurline on the evolution of The glass menagerie -- George W. Crandell on cinematic devices -- Gilbert Debusscher on American and European influences -- Esther Merle Jackson on the anti-hero -- Richard E. Kramer on sculptural drama and plastic theatre -- Paul T. Nolan on the memory play -- Delma E. Presley on The glass menagerie as American memory -- Tom Scanlan on family and psyche -- Roger B. Stein on catastrophe without violence -- Judith J. Thompson on symbol, myth and ritual.
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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RKSMVV Library | 812.09Wil/T (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | A12414 |
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811.09 Mai/C Studies in American poetry | 811.09 Paul/A American Poetry: Colonial to Contemporary | 811.09 Paul/A American Poetry: Colonial to Contemporary | 812.09Wil/T The glass menagerie | 812 Wil/T The Glass menagerie | 812 Wil/T The Glass menagerie | 812.09 Kra/D A companion to twentieth-century American drama |
Lester A. Beaurline on the evolution of The glass menagerie -- George W. Crandell on cinematic devices -- Gilbert Debusscher on American and European influences -- Esther Merle Jackson on the anti-hero -- Richard E. Kramer on sculptural drama and plastic theatre -- Paul T. Nolan on the memory play -- Delma E. Presley on The glass menagerie as American memory -- Tom Scanlan on family and psyche -- Roger B. Stein on catastrophe without violence -- Judith J. Thompson on symbol, myth and ritual.
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