The other side of love Sam Shepard's gothic family plays /
Abstract (Summary)
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From one of his earliest plays—Rock Garden (1964)—to one of his most recent
works—The Late Henry Moss (2000)—Sam Shepard has been fascinated by the
American family. Shepard, this dissertation argues, presents a markedly “gothic” portrait
of the American family by borrowing dramatic techniques from the “gothic” literary
tradition in order to critique traditional American myths about the family—including the
belief that a type of social harmony, even utopia, will result if each family member adheres
strictly to his or her prescribed role within the family unit. Shepard’s critique of the
American family is in many ways a critique of modern American culture, though Shepard
himself balks at being called a social critic, insisting he is much more interested in highly
charged emotional and psychic states of individual characters. Using gothic techniques—
including uncanny moments, incest, ghosts, and doppelgängers—Shepard engages in
subtle cultural critique without seeming programmatic or didactic.
The American gothic family is comprised of identifiable character types: the fallen
father, the alienated mother, and the haunted son. These recur in Shepard’s gothic family
plays, as well as in the gothic family plays of Eugene O’Neill and Tennessee Williams. In
examining Shepard’s gothic families, this dissertation employs a psychological
methodology, including an examination of how attempts to repress traumatic memories
ultimately fail, resulting in a gothic “return” of the repressed past.
The examination of Shepard’s “family plays” focuses on five major works—Curse
of the Starving Class, Buried Child, True West, Fool for Love, and A Lie of the
Mind—as well as two relatively “minor” plays: The Holy Ghostly, States of Shock. A
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final chapter examines The Late Henry Moss, the latest installment in Shepard’s “gothic”
project.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Location:USA - Tennessee
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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