Limit this search to....

Three Plays: The Cow Bl the Mud Hut Bl the Donkey
Contributor(s): Yoo, Chi-Jin (Author), Jang, Won-Jae (Author), Cave, Richard Allen (Foreword by)
ISBN: 0861404521     ISBN-13: 9780861404520
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $21.56  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: December 2005
* Not available - Not in print at this time *Annotation: In his study Irish Influences on Korean Theatre during the 1920s and 1930s, Won-Jae Jang alerted scholars to a previously unexamined example of intercultural exchange in which Korean scholars looked to Irish writers and especially Irish dramatists to help them find a way of freeing themselves
from the cultural imperialism of Japan. They studied the stated aims of Yeats, Lady Gregory and Synge in founding an Irish National Theatre Movement to gain independence from the dominance of English drama, read translations of their plays as well as some by O'Casey and T. C. Murray, and decided to
follow that example, first by adaptations, then imitations and finally with original dramas that nonetheless reveal a profound debt to distinct Irish models.
The three plays by Chi-Jin Yoo (the centenary of whose birth is celebrated in 2005) that are contained in this volume belong to this last group. In them he focuses on the lives of the deprived and the impoverished, country people struggling to maintain a degree of security if only to retain some
vestige of human dignity. In this he follows the Irish realist tradition rather than the Yeatsian preoccupation with the legendary and the heroic. Won-Jae Jang offers the reader literal translations from the Korean, the better to respect the raw energy of the original dramas, into which Chi-Jin Yoo
welded a surprising variety of influences from Irish playwrights. As well as the three plays, The Cow, The Mud Hut and The Donkey, also published here is an article by Yoo, "Sean O'Casey and I," which shows the major influence that O'Casey in particular had on his work. Professor Richard Allen Cave
of Royal Holloway, University of London, hasprovided an informative introduction.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Collections | Asian - General
- Drama | Asian - General
- Literary Criticism | Asian - General
Dewey: 895.724
LCCN: 2006365958
Series: Colin Smythe Publication
Physical Information: 0.36" H x 5.56" W x 8.51" (0.34 lbs) 110 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In his study Irish Influences on Korean Theatre during the 1920s and 1930s, Won-Jae Jang alerted scholars to a previously unexamined example of intercultural exchange in which Korean scholars looked to Irish writers and especially Irish dramatists to help them find a way of freeing themselves from the cultural imperialism of Japan. They studied the stated aims of Yeats, Lady Gregory and Synge in founding an Irish National Theatre Movement to gain independence from the dominance of English drama, read translations of their plays as well as some by O'Casey and T. C. Murray, and decided to follow that example, first by adaptations, then imitations and finally with original dramas that nonetheless reveal a profound debt to distinct Irish models.

The three plays by Chi-Jin Yoo (the centenary of whose birth is celebrated in 2005) that are contained in this volume belong to this last group. In them he focuses on the lives of the deprived and the impoverished, country people struggling to maintain a degree of security if only to retain some vestige of human dignity. In this he follows the Irish realist tradition rather than the Yeatsian preoccupation with the legendary and the heroic. Won-Jae Jang offers the reader literal translations from the Korean, the better to respect the raw energy of the original dramas, into which Chi-Jin Yoo welded a surprising variety of influences from Irish playwrights. As well as the three plays, The Cow, The Mud Hut and The Donkey, also published here is an article by Yoo, Sean O'Casey and I, which shows the major influence that O'Casey in particular had on his work. Professor Richard Allen Cave of Royal Holloway, University of London, has provided an informative introduction.