| Papers [1-15] of 16 :: [Page 1 of 2] | | Go to page : 1 2 —> | Search results on "PIRANDELLO LUIGI": |
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Luigi Pirandello?s "Henry IV", 2002. A review of Luigi Pirandello?s play "Henry IV". 1,699 words (approx. 6.8 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 55.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines Luigi Pirandello?s "Henry IV", a powerful and complex play that challenges the dialectical oppositions of madness versus sanity and illusion versus reality. It analyzes how although the protagonist is supposed to be a madman, he is the one who possesses the profound insight into life and reality and in comparison. It shows how the "sane" characters are ridiculous and shallow in their perceptions. It evaluates how by elevating the "madman" above the sane characters and giving him the voice of reason, Pirandello questions the validity of the demarcations between madness and sanity. It looks at how Henry?s imaginary world is a microcosm of life that is equivalent to a grand masquerade consisting of sane people who also try to deceive themselves by playing the roles of their choice.
From the Paper "The themes of madness and acting are inextricably interwoven together in this play. Henry?s madness is encapsulated in his illusion about being the real Henry IV. He is surrounded by people who also play roles in their attempt to simulate the period of Henry IV. Furthermore, as a mad person, Henry is an actor who transcends the limitations of time, space and sequence that affects human beings. However, he is not the only "madman" in this play. In his speech to Matilda in Act I, he illuminates her desperate attempt to defy the passage of time by constructing a mask of youth to suit her self-perception: "?my lady, don?t dye your hair to deceive the others, nor even yourself? I do it for a joke! You do it seriously! But I assure you that you too, Madam, are in masquerade, though it be in all seriousness" (Pirandello 170; 1). Although Matilda knows that she cannot win her battle against time, she still engages in her imaginary creation of her ideal youthful image. In the same way, she is as mad as Henry IV because she is also trapped into her illusion (Bassnett-McGuire 107). "
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Luigi Pirandello's Works, 1976. This paper investigates Illusion and Reality in Luigi Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of An Author" and "It Is So If You Think So". 1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 6 sources, $ 63.95 »
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From the Paper "This paper investigates Illusion and Reality in Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of An Author" and "It Is So If You Think So."
Glauco Cambon in his introduction to Pirandello: A Collection of Critical Essays speaks of the stage as an ideal setting for the presentation of the conflict between illusion and reality. Since every man is an island, his own prison, then communication can only make sense if the real selves speak and not the mass. But, asks Cambon, can our real selves be known and can not personal masks have more truth than the so-called "real"? Madness has been called by many an extreme lucidity. What Pirandello does it explode the myth of "fixed personal identity" and points out the elusive reality of personal existence.
Stark Young in a review of "Right You Are If You Think You
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"Six Characters in Search as an Author" by Luigi Pirandello, 2000. An analysis of the play's political influences and themes (focusing on fascism), technique, non-realism and appearance vs. reality. 2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 10 sources, $ 79.95 »
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Abstract An overtly non-realistic portrayal of society is offered in a play by Luigi Pirandello, yet this is also a play with a political analysis at its heart. Appearance versus reality is a theme that infuses Pirandello's play Six Characters in Search of an Author. The technique used by the playwright is extremely theatrical and has a long history--the play-within-a-play was used often by Shakespeare and can be found in the works of other major dramatists.
From the Paper "An overtly non-realistic portrayal of society is offered in a play by Luigi Pirandello, yet this is also a play with a political analysis at its heart. Appearance versus reality is a theme that infuses Pirandello's play Six Characters in Search of an Author. The technique used by the playwright is extremely theatrical and has a long history--the play-within-a-play was used often by Shakespeare and can be found in the works of other major dramatists. The playwright often uses such a device to comment on the process of playwriting itself, showing within a performance of a play the act of creating and presenting some vision of reality in dramatic form. Pirandello's work makes this self-reflective structure the basic substance of the play and uses it to raise questions as to how we can tell when reality ends and illusion begins, or the other way round. The selfhood..."
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"The Visit" by Friedrich Duerrenmatt and "The Man With The Flower In His Mouth" by Luigi Pirandello, 2000. An examination of the two plays' allegorical treatment of death. 1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 2 sources, $ 39.95 »
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From the Paper "Friedrich Duerrenmatt's The Visit and Luigi Pirandello's The Man with the Flower in His Mouth are allegorical plays in which certain characters confront death. The human, allegorical figure of death is, in both plays, a female character. In Pirandello's short piece she is the wife of a terminally ill man who follows him everywhere, but does not speak. In The Visit death comes in the form of Claire Zachanassian, the multimillionaire who returns to her hometown looking for revenge--or justice--for the sufferings she went through as a girl. In this play death takes a very active role. Zachanassian identifies her victim and seduces the town into killing him by corrupting them with promises of badly needed money. She even manages to persuade her victim to accept his death rather than fleeing it. In Pirandello's play, however, the victim is suffering from..."
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Surrealism in Pirandello and Elizabeth Lecompte, 2000. An overview of surrealism and its influence on works of playwright and visual artist. 900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 4 sources, $ 31.95 »
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Abstract Surrealism was an artistic movement with a strong political component, Surrealism was the most highly organized and tightly controlled artistic movement in this century, and its moral and executive leader was Andr? Breton, given the unofficial title of the Pope of Surreali
From the Paper "Surrealism was an artistic movement with a strong political component, Surrealism was the most highly organized and tightly controlled artistic movement in this century, and its moral and executive leader was Andr? Breton, given the unofficial title of the Pope of Surrealism. Surrealism was also a life-style and a philosophical outlook that infused artistic expression, political action, and social life:
At the heart of Surrealism lay the belief that "objective chance"--by which was meant inexplicable coincidence--is central to reality, which is not an orderly system of events apprehensible by logical thought. Hence, it was believed, knowledge of true reality can be gained only through a-logical insights of the unconscious mind and these insights can only be..."
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"Six Characters in Search of an Author", 2004. A Freudian analysis of the play, "Six Characters in Search of an Author", by Luigi Pirandello. 718 words (approx. 2.9 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 25.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines how Luigi Pirandello's play, "Six Characters in Search of an Author", is a representation of reality as opposed to the presentation of reality via drama. It looks at how it can also be interpreted as a division of the conscious mind from reality, or what Freud called ?doubling?, since the characters in the play are separated into actors and the characters they are to play. In particular, it attempts to show how the relationship between the author's characters and the actors who attempt to play the characters can be understood in terms of Freud?s theory of the uncanny.
From the Paper "In the play, six characters appear at a rehearsal and are looking for a way to have their story told. Their goal is to have actors play the parts they represent in the story as yet completed. It is a paradoxical situation in which the actors are imitating the characters as they ?perform? the circumstances of their lives. The conflict is made manifest in the discussions between the father and the producer as to what constitutes reality. The actors are ?real? because they are living humans. The characters are ?fictitious forms? of consciousness. From the perspective of the characters, the actors are comical in their attempts to recreate what the character has created. The actor is both ?real? and an imitation while the characters are a representation presented to the world as ?real? because of the reality of their stories."
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?The Open Boat? and ?The Man with a Flower in his Mouth?, 2002. Examines the portrayal of death in Stephen Crane's story "The Open Boat" and the play "The Man with the Flower in his Mouth" by Luigi Pirandello. 819 words (approx. 3.3 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 29.95 »
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Abstract This study compares and contrast the nature and dramatic significance of the confrontations with death of the main characters in Stephen Crane's story "The Open Boat" and Luigi Pirandello's play "The Man with the Flower in His Mouth." The study focuses on death as a frightening, enraging and appalling force for the two men in Pirandello's play and a violent and powerful force of nature in Crane's story.
From the Paper "Crane's "The Open Boat" shows death to be a powerful force which is everywhere and cannot be denied or forgotten. Death in the form of the powerful sea confronts the four men in the story from beginning to end. Death waits for them in every thought as they consider trying to reach the shore. The men in the boat are simple men who must face death with no pretense, for their lives literally hang in the balance. They must either struggle to live, or prepare to die as best they can. The four individuals must not only deal with the very real possibility of their own deaths, but they must deal with the moral decision which may cost them their lives while saving the others' lives. The author seems to suggest that the Captain gave his life to make sure that the others survived (Crane 15)."
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"Six Characters in Search of an Author", 2009. An analysis of the play "Six Characters in Search of an Author" by Luigi Pirandello. 1,958 words (approx. 7.8 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 62.95 »
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Abstract The paper highlights the dysfunctional and incomplete nature of the characters and their difficult relationships in Luigi Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of an Author". The paper shows how these elements parody the experience of writing drama as well as deconstruct family relationships that have appeared in Western drama since the ancient Greeks and Shakespeare. The paper concludes that the deconstruction of belief in the family and the theater challenges the viewer's own beliefs about fiction and about how a 'happy' family is created and recreated.
From the Paper "At the beginning of the absurdist play "Six Characters in Search of an Author" by the 20th century Italian playwright Luigi Pirandello, the characters of the drama complain to a manager rehearsing another play with 'real' actors that they are incomplete and that the author must finish them before the actors can finish rehearsing the play for performance. These intruders are not actors, they are 'characters' in search of an author, a plot--or at least the right to air what has happened to their family, which is terrible and shameful, they admit. The dysfunctional and incomplete nature of the characters, and their difficult relationships could be said to both parody the experience of writing drama as well as deconstruct family relationships that have appeared in Western drama since the ancient Greeks and Shakespeare."
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Death in ?The Visit? and ?The Man with the Flower in His Mouth?, 2002. Examines and compares the theme of death in Friedrich Duerrenmatt's "The Visit" and Luigi Pirandello's "The Man with the Flower in His Mouth". 1,615 words (approx. 6.5 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 52.95 »
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Abstract Friedrich Duerrenmatt's "The Visit" and Luigi Pirandello's "The Man with the Flower in His Mouth" are allegorical plays in which certain characters confront death. The paper shows that the human - an allegorical figure of death - is, in both plays, a female character. In Pirandello's short piece she is the wife of a terminally ill man who follows him everywhere, but does not speak. In "The Visit", death comes in the form of Claire Zachanassian, the multimillionaire who returns to her hometown looking for revenge--or justice--for the sufferings she went through as a girl.
From the Paper "In this idea of waiting for death at home, with time "measured by the ticking of the big clock in the dining room," is the notion that death should become part of life, which is symbolized by the clock and the passing of time (6). His wife, or death, is attempting to get him to integrate death with the rest of his experience. But he sees them as two completely separate things. Death is not the culmination of life but a terrible interruption that has nothing to do with living."
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"Six Characters in Search of an Author", 2002. A character study of the personalities in "Six Characters in Search of an Author" by playwright Luigi Pirandello. 1,795 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 0 sources, $ 57.95 »
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Abstract The paper examines the drama "Six Character in Search of an Author", written by Luigi Pirandello, which is play within a play. The paper shows Pirandello's theme throughout the play that life is a script with people fixed to patterns that are evident in everyday workings of life and through the history of previous lives.
From the Paper "The drama Six Characters in Search of an Author, written by Luigi Pirandello, is a play within a play, full of reality philosophizing, which shows how people are real in the same way that characters are. These two themes are highly reflective on what it means to be a play, by comparing it to life, and what it means to be a person, by comparing what it means to be a character. The drama is an assemblage of a play, put together on the spot, when six characters enter another play?s rehearsal in search of an author who will manifest their roles by writing a script to their drama. This is their one bent purpose in life, to live on the stage, in their world in which they are real. Though they seem alive, as they are in their search, they are not fulfilling the purpose of filling their roles. They need to tell their stories, they desire reaffirmation of existence and for this they need their fixed reality, the stage. Their script is this means of existence and acting the script out is a means of living or being real. People in the same way are doomed to be scripted; identical to characters, they live only within their fixed play, that which acts itself out from birth to death."
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"Six Characters in Search of an Author", 2007. A comparative analysis of Luigi Pirandello's play "Six Characters in Search of an Author" and its film version. 2,336 words (approx. 9.3 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 71.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses how, contrary to most film remakes, Stacy Keach does an excellent job of turning "Six Characters in Search of an Author " into a film version that preserves Pirandello's original storyline without any compromise. The paper explains that Keach's transformation of the play does not compromise the underlining plot because most of the changes involve only visual aspects. The paper also examines how, through his changes in the setting of the theatre, casting of the characters, and interpretation of Pirandello's stage directions, Keach is able to successfully transform the play into a well thought out film that preserves the plot while directing it toward a new television audience.
From the Paper "When Pirandello wrote the play, he was writing it toward an audience in a theatre audience. Since he was writing a play within a play, it seems logical that he would choose the setting to be in a theatre. When Keach was creating a film version of the play, he was creating this for a television audience. Because he was trying to relate to a television audience and not a theatre audience, like Pirandello, Keach chose the setting to be a television studio. Each and every aspect of these stage directions are easily compatible for making a film, which made it very simple for the director to transform the play. "
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Themes in Prandello's play, 2002. An analysis of Luigi Pirandello's play "Six Characters in Search of an Author", focusing on its major themes. 2,630 words (approx. 10.5 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 79.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines whether the play reflects Pirandello's political ideals as a fascist and how this might be the case. It discusses that while Pirandello's political ideals may have been inherent in all his work, as might be expected, his real issues in this play are theatrical, creating an ongoing critique of the relationship between reality and the theater.
From the Paper "An overtly non-realistic portrayal of society is offered in a play by Luigi Pirandello, yet this is also a play with a political analysis at its heart. Appearance versus reality is a theme that infuses Pirandello's play Six Characters in Search of an Author. The technique used by the playwright is extremely theatrical and has a long history--the play-within-a-play was used often by Shakespeare and can be found in the works of other major dramatists. The playwright often uses such a device to comment on the process of playwriting itself, showing within a performance of a play the act of creating and presenting some vision of reality in dramatic form. Pirandello's work makes this self-reflective structure the basic substance of the play and uses it to raise questions as to how we can tell when reality ends and illusion begins, or the other way round. The selfhood of his characters is less an issue given that they are types and are also actors assuming selves not their own. Their examination of their selfhood is itself a political act because it takes place in a social setting and relies on determining each individual's relationship to others in that social setting."
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Death in Literature, 2002. A review of several pieces of literature which deal with the issue of death. 1,109 words (approx. 4.4 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 38.95 »
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Abstract This paper reviews three different pieces of literature that all deal with the notion of death. The first is Stephen Crane's story "The Open Boat", which shows death to be a powerful force which is everywhere and cannot be denied or forgotten. The second piece is Luigi Pirandello's play "The Man with the Flower in His Mouth" where the author focuses on death through the thoughts and feelings of the man who himself is dying. The final piece is Robert Frost's poem, "Home Burial" in which the main characters find that death is a constant presence which keeps their relationship a sad and angry one.
From the Paper "Despite the angry bitterness of the Man, Pirandello shows death to be more mentally affecting than either physical or emotional. The Man is wrestling with his own death still, and he uses the presence of the Commuter to express his dark thoughts. Pirandello's main point seems to be that death is everywhere, but we are in denial about it, until we are faced with it in a way which we cannot deny, and then we must come to grips with it, however angrily or bitterly, with whatever thoughts of murder or suicide we might have (Pirandello 8). Meanwhile, symbolized by the Commuter, the rest of us go about our lives as if we are immortal."
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Dramatic Differences In Two Plays, 2002. Analysis of Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler" and Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of an Author". 1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 2 sources, $ 55.95 »
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Abstract Analysis of Ibsen's HEDDA GABLER and Pirandello's SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR. Depictions of society and of the world. The power struggle. Destiny and manipulation. Potential and form. Struggle for social status and financial security in HEDDA GABLER. Struggle between what is real and what is not in Pirandello's play.
From the Paper "Ibsen's play Hedda Gabler and Pirandello's play Six Characters in Search of an Author present several profound dramatic differences. Ibsen wrote his plays while a sojourner in Italy, although he was Norwegian. Pirandello was Sicilian born and emphasized his Italian nativity through his first creative efforts. While Ibsen's themes deal a lot with the moralistic faults of modern society, Pirandello's themes of tragedy and disillusionment expose his own personal trials and tribulations. What we shall deal with here in comparing these plays, is contrasting the following items:
Hedda Gabler's realistic depiction of society, with strong class differences between aristocracy and bourgeois worlds while "Six Characters" chooses to sketch a picture of conflict between the world of ..."
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Form and Meaning in Oral History, 2002. An exploration into Alessandro Portelli's oral history methodology through his essays, including "The Death of Luigi Trastulli". 1,500 words (approx. 6.0 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 49.95 »
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Abstract This paper begins by situating Alessandro Portelli's oral history in the context of the postwar reaction in Italy against the historical theories of the influential Neapolitan philosopher Benedetto Croce. It then proceeds to a discussion of Portelli's methodology by reference above all to the essay "The Death of Luigi Trastulli", whose starting point is the death at the hands of the police of a young Terni steelworker in 1949. The paper shows that Portelli's oral history methodology was inspired by his path-breaking discovery that erroneous memories possess historical value. It then concludes by raising some possible criticisms of the methodology.
From the Paper "Finally, by way of conclusion, the comment might be made that Portelli's approach can seem naive. Because he seems normally to interview people whose politics he shares, he constantly seeks out factors to explain discrepancies in accounts which lend their motives a degree of nobility which they probably do not always deserve. To this reader, a fair proportion of the stories he reviews in relation to the Trastulli event have more than a hint of self-exculpation about them. One fears that Portelli's methodology, which seeks to minimize difference between historian and speaker, may, in the end, unwittingly elevate the incorrigible liar to the same status as the conscientious reporter."
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