The Son (Hasenclever play) explained
The Son |
Characters: | The Son The Tutor The Friend The Fräulein The Father Cherubim Von Tuchmeyer Prince Scheitel Adrienne Police Inspector |
Setting: | The present (1914), over 3 days |
Place: | Dresden |
Orig Lang: | German |
Subject: | Intergenerational conflict |
Genre: | Expressionism |
The Son (de|Der Sohn) is a five-act Expressionist play by the German playwright Walter Hasenclever.[1] It was the first self-proclaimed, full-length Expressionist play to be produced, though its dramatic structure is more or less realistic.[2] It takes as its subject the conflict between the generations and a rejection of the world in general by the young.[3] It is a semi-autobiographical work.[4]
It was written in 1912, first published in 1914, and first performed in 1916 at the Albert-Theater in Dresden, although Hasenclever had read the play at the literary cabaret Das Gnu in early 1914.[5] Ernst Deutsch played the Son to great acclaim.[6]
The play ends with the Son killing his father. He then "strides triumphantly over his father's corpse into a future full of glorious potential".[7]
References
- Sources
- Banham, Martin, ed. 1998. The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. .
- Hasenclever, Walter. 1994. Der Sohn. Ein Drama in fünf Akten. Nachw. v. Michael Schulz. Stuttgart: Reclam. .
- Kuhns, David F. 1997. German Expressionist Theatre: The Actor and the Stage. New ed. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2006. .
- Marx, Henry, trans. 1997. The Son. By Walter Hasenclever. In Schürer (1997a, 82-145).
- Rorrison, Hugh. 1998. "Hasenclever, Walter." In Banham (1998, 475).
- Schürer, Ernst, ed. 1997a. German Expressionist Plays. The German Library ser. vol. 66. New York: Continuum. .
- ---. 1997b. Introduction. In Schürer (1997a, vii-xxi).
- Wellwarth, George E. 2002. "Expressionism." In The Reader's Encyclopedia of World Drama. Ed. John Gassner and Edward Quinn. Mineola, NY: Dover. 256-261. .
Notes and References
- Marx (1997) and Rorrison (1998, 475).
- Kuhns (1997, 23, 96), Rorrison (1998, 475), and Wellwarth (2002, 258).
- Rorrison (1998, 475) and Schürer (1997b, xiii).
- Schürer (1997b, xiv).
- Kuhns (1997, 61, 94), Rorrison (1998, 475), Schürer (1997b, ix, xiv), and Wellwarth (2002, 258).
- Kuhns (1997, 89) and Schürer (1997b, xiv-xv).
- Kuhns (1997, 36).