Present Regarding Books Hamletmachine
Title | : | Hamletmachine |
Author | : | Heiner Müller |
Book Format | : | Ebook |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 280 pages |
Published | : | May 2001 |
Categories | : | Plays. Theatre. Drama. Fiction. European Literature. German Literature |

Heiner Müller
Ebook | Pages: 280 pages Rating: 3.72 | 595 Users | 39 Reviews
Commentary In Pursuance Of Books Hamletmachine
In Müller's fragmented eight-page text, Shakespeare's masterpiece struggles to survive amidst the mounting rubble of literary and political history. Failed ideals and human disillusionment give way in Hamletmachine to the youth clamoring in reaction against the past in order to change the present. To break free of the continual cycle of violence within history the past is questioned and deconstructed. Moving away from psychological narrative, Hamletmachine creates a landscape of the betrayed revolution. Brown's production challenges and provides resistance to this complicated text, inciting spectators to do the same. This performance is an exploration into the place of theatre as a sight of revolutionary change. In Müller's words, "the slogan of the Napoleonic era still applies: Theater is the Revolution on the march."Particularize Books As Hamletmachine
Original Title: | Die Hamletmaschine |
Edition Language: | English |
Rating Regarding Books Hamletmachine
Ratings: 3.72 From 595 Users | 39 ReviewsWeigh Up Regarding Books Hamletmachine
الکترا در تقابل با افلیاjust had a good chat about authority vs. insanitymeaning such experimentation done by say Heiner vs. Virginia, gets received at varying places on the authority/insanity trajectory. Anyway.
I loved the general chaotic feel of this, and as the purpose of the text seems to be throwing people off and leaving them confused and baffled it seems to have reached its goal. I like it, mainly for the sheer absurdity of it.

It may just be that I had to read it completely exhausted and kind of quickly, but what is this? I understand that it is supposed to tackle topics like feminism and the non-possibility of dialogues for today, but all I'm reading is incoherent babbling and forced weirdness, at least for my taste. It's like... when I am reading a re.adaptation, or whatever you wanna call it, I kind of hope for a little bit of ground basis from the piece of art it is based on. For the first two scenes, I was still
I wrote an essay about this once... i had no idea what I was talking about. It probably deserves more stars, but I wasn't intelligent enough to understand.
this is one of the rawest things ive ever read. if you like gdr era literature and vaguely intelligible narratives, this is a hard recommend
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