_Understanding Suzan-Lori Parks_ is a critical study of a playwright
and screenwriter who was the first African American woman to receive
the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Suzan-Lori Parks is also the recipient
of a MacArthur Genius Award, a Whiting Writers Award, a CalArts/Alpert
Award in the Arts, two Obie Awards, and a Eugene McDermott Award in
the Arts. In this book Jennifer Larson examines how Parks, through the
innovative language and narratives of her extensive body of work,
investigates and invigorates literary and cultural history.
Larson discusses all of Parks's genres—play, screenplay, essay, and
novel—closely reading key texts from Parks's more experimental
earlier pieces as well as her more linear later narratives. Larson's
study begins with a survey of Parks's earliest and most difficult
texts including I_mperceptible Mutabilities in the Third Kingdom_ and
_The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World._ Larson
then analyzes Venus, In the Blood, and the Lincoln Plays: _The America
Play_ and the Pulitzer Prize-winning _TopDog/Underdog. _
Larson also discusses two of Parks's most important screenplays, _Girl
6_ and _Their Eyes Were Watching God._ In interpreting these
screenplays, Larson examines film's role in the popularization and
representation of African American culture and history. These essays
suggest an approach to all genres of literature and blend creativity,
form, culture, and history into a revisionary aesthetic that allows
for no identity or history to remain fixed, with Parks arguing that in
order to be relevant they must all be dynamic and democratic.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781611172379
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
University of South Carolina Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
176
Forfatter