| Alan Downer - 1961 - 49 Seiten
...to create, to revitalize the theater of realistic conventions. "Truth, life or reality," he writes, "is an organic thing which the poetic imagination...than those which were merely present in appearance." His characteristic method might be described as a symphonic reassembling of elements into a new unity,... | |
| Gerald Weales - 48 Seiten
...devices of a nonrealistic sort because, as he insists in the Production Notes to The Glass Menagerie, "truth, life, or reality is an organic thing which...than those which were merely present in appearance." His use of devices ranges from the subtle to the shockingly obvious, from organic machine to pure gimmick.... | |
| Ortrun Zuber-Skerritt - 1984 - 214 Seiten
...or neglect to follow, Williams' stated non-realisiic intentions. Williams (l97la, p. l3II has argued that '... truth. life, or reality is an organic thing...than those which were merely present in appearance.' It seems wilful distortion on the part of critics and directors to neglect the use of the non-realistic... | |
| C. W. E. Bigsby, Christopher William Edgar Bigsby - 1984 - 368 Seiten
...a photographic likeness. Everyone should know nowadays the unimportance of the photographic in art; that truth, life, or reality, is an organic thing...through changing into other forms than those which merely present appearances. 'These remarks', he added, are not meant as a preface only to this particular... | |
| Brenda Murphy - 1992 - 240 Seiten
..."everyone should know nowadays the unimportance of the photographic in art" (7). Instead, he wrote, "truth, life, or reality is an organic thing which...than those which were merely present in appearance" (7). Lest any reader miss the point, the young playwright declared that "these remarks are not meant... | |
| Elisa De la Roche - 1995 - 222 Seiten
...nowadays the ummportance of the photographic in art: thai truth, life, or reality is an organic thmg which the poetic imagination can represent or suggest,...than those which were merely present in appearance. These remarks are not meant as a preface to this particular play. They have to do with a conception... | |
| Matthew C. Roudané - 1997 - 306 Seiten
...speaks." Everyone, he insists, "should know nowadays the unimportance of the photographic in art" because "truth, life, or reality is an organic thing which...through changing into other forms than those which merely present in appearance" (131). This is something more than a manifesto, though, at the beginning... | |
| C. W. E. Bigsby - 2000 - 476 Seiten
...compassion. When he said of his own work that he wished to escape the constriction of realism because truth, life, or reality is an organic thing which the poetic imagination can represent or suggest only through transformation, through changing it into other forms than those which merely present appearances,... | |
| Ronald Gene Rollins - 2001 - 168 Seiten
...to The Glass Menagerie: Everyone should know nowadays the unimportance of the photographic in art; that truth, life, or reality is an organic thing which...through changing into other forms than those which are merely present in appearance. 19 Hence it is Leonard's insightful, premeditated intent to capture... | |
| Stratos E. Constantinidis - 2009 - 252 Seiten
...to the play. He counsels, Everyone should know nowadays the unimportance of the photographic in art: that truth, life, or reality is an organic thing which...than those which were merely present in appearance [xix]. Accordingly, Williams' authorial representative in the play, Tom, owns up to his own poetic... | |
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