Abstract/Details

Theatre as intervention into trauma: Wolfgang Borchert's “The Outsider” and Erwin Sylvanus' “Dr. Korczak and the Children” in the post-World War Two German era

Cadman, Amy Suzanne.   University of Alberta (Canada) ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  2004. MQ96411.

Abstract (summary)

This thesis examines the potential of theatre to serve as an intervention into past trauma. Wolfgang Borchert's The Outsider and Erwin Sylvanus' Dr. Korczak and the Children are considered as means by which to bear witness to the trauma of World War Two and the Holocaust in the post-World War Two German era. Chapter One examines art's perversion under the Third Reich. Chapter Two provides an overview of The Outsider and Dr. Korczak and the Children, and considers their reception in postwar Germany. Chapter Three establishes Trauma Theory as a framework by which to analyze these plays. Chapter Four considers the ways in which the plays bear witness to the trauma of World War Two and the Holocaust, and the ways in which reality became an ephemeral concept following the Nazi era. Chapter Five examines ‘choice’, ‘guilt’, and ‘ownership’ as stages in resolution of Germany's traumatic experience of the War.

Indexing (details)


Subject
Theater;
Germanic literature;
German literature
Classification
0465: Theater
0311: German literature
Identifier / keyword
Communication and the arts; Language, literature and linguistics
Title
Theatre as intervention into trauma: Wolfgang Borchert's “The Outsider” and Erwin Sylvanus' “Dr. Korczak and the Children” in the post-World War Two German era
Author
Cadman, Amy Suzanne
Number of pages
135
Degree date
2004
School code
0351
Source
MAI 43/03M, Masters Abstracts International
ISBN
978-0-612-96411-2
Advisor
Defraeye, P.; Hawkins, J. A.
University/institution
University of Alberta (Canada)
University location
Canada -- Alberta, CA
Degree
M.A.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
MQ96411
ProQuest document ID
305102763
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/305102763/fulltextPDF