The Provincetown Players and the Culture of Modernity(English, Hardcover, Murphy Brenda)

The Provincetown Players and the Culture of Modernity(English, Hardcover, Murphy Brenda)

  • Murphy Brenda
Publisher:Cambridge University PressISBN 13: 9780521838528ISBN 10: 0521838525

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The Provincetown Players and the Culture of Modernity(English, Hardcover, Murphy Brenda) is written by Murphy Brenda and published by Cambridge University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0521838525 (ISBN 10) and 9780521838528 (ISBN 13).

The Provincetown Players was a major cultural institution in Greenwich Village from 1916 to 1922, when American Modernism was conceived and developed. This study considers the group's vital role, and its wider significance in twentieth-century American culture. Describing the varied and often contentious response to modernity among the Players, Murphy reveals the central contribution of the group of poets around Alfred Kreymborg's Others magazine, including William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Mina Loy and Djuna Barnes, and such modernist artists as Marguerite and William Zorach, Charles Demuth and Bror Nordfeldt, to the Players' developing modernist aesthetics. The impact of their modernist art and ideas on such central Provincetown figures as Eugene O'Neill, Susan Glaspell, and Edna St Vincent Millay and a second generation of artists, such as e. e. cummings and Edmund Wilson, who wrote plays for the Provincetown Playhouse, is evident in Murphy's close analysis of over thirty plays.