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The Theatre of Gombrowicz

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2021

Extract

Critics generally have considered Gombrowicz’ plays Ivona, Princess of Burgundia and The Marriage as purely oneiric, incoherent texts whose principal value lies in their grotesqueness and affectivity. Gombrowicz himself interpreted the plays as attempts to present the problem of youth. In contrast to these views, I will try to show that both plays are compelling satires of society.

The two plays deal with two different societies. In Ivona, Princess of Burgundia it is pre-World War II European society (the play was written in 1935) or, more precisely, the ruling classes of that society. The Marriage (1946) is about the new society which resulted from the war and from the seizure of power by the communist parties, with emphasis on the events leading up to that seizure.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1970 The Drama Review

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References

* When Malraux transposed the same events in The Walnut Trees of Altenburg he already termed the opposition's behavior “suicide.” (Cf. Goldmann, L., pour une sociologie du roman [Paris: Gallimard, 1966]Google Scholar, Chapter II.)