Academic literature on the topic 'Riders to the sea (Synge, J.M.)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Riders to the sea (Synge, J.M.)"

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Synge, John Millington, Leonardo Marcondes Malavasi FAIG, Letícia Carvalho Pereira PASQUALOTTO, Henrique Vieira TOZZI, Vitória Tassara Costa SILVA, and Roberta Rego RODRIGUES. "Tradução para o português do Brasil da peça teatral The Playboy of the Western World, de J. M. Synge." Belas Infiéis 7, no. 1 (2018): 271–344. http://dx.doi.org/10.26512/belasinfieis.v7i1.12574.

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O dramaturgo John Millington Synge nasceu em 16 de abril de 1871, em Rathfarnham – aproximadamente 20 minutos de Dublin – na Irlanda. Fez parte da geração de autores que atuaram no renascimento literário irlandês, como William Butler Yeats e Lady Augusta Gregory. Entre suas peças publicadas estão: In the Shadow of the Glen (primeira encenação em 1903), Riders to the Sea (1904) e The Well of the Saints (1905) – sua primeira peça em três atos.
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Rhee, Young Suck. "Reading the Poetics of J. M. Synge: Nature and Poetry in The Aran Islands and Riders to the Sea*." Yeats Journal of Korea 42 (December 30, 2013): 179–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.14354/yjk.2013.42.179.

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Park, Heebon. "Drama as Creative Ethnography: Revisiting J. M. Synge’s Riders to the Sea." British and American Language and Literature Association of Korea, no. 132 (March 30, 2019): 123–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.21297/ballak.2019.132.123.

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Jang, Won-Jae. "J. M. Synge’s Riders to the Sea and Its Korean Translation*1." Yeats Journal of Korea 24 (December 31, 2005): 163–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.14354/yjk.2005.24.163.

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Al-Ghoreibi, Fathia Saleh. "The Troubled Irish Mother Figure in J. M. Synge's Riders to the Sea and Tom Murphy's Bailegangaire." Umm Al-Qura University Journal of Languages and Literatures, no. 15 (March 2015): 9–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.12816/0030927.

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Books on the topic "Riders to the sea (Synge, J.M.)"

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Cannon Harris, Susan. Mobilising Maurya: J. M. Synge, Bertolt Brecht and the Revolutionary Mother. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424462.003.0005.

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This chapter examines the impact on modern drama of the establishment of the Soviet Union, through in-depth investigation of a special case: Bertolt Brecht’s transformation of J. M. Synge’s 1904 Riders to the Sea into a 1937 Spanish Civil War play called Señora Carrar’s Rifles. Synge and Ireland were not, for their own sakes, important to Brecht; he was drawn to Riders as a model which might help him solve the problem of how to radicalise the working-class mother. After the disastrous 1935 production of Brecht’s The Mother by the New York City-based Theatre Union, Brecht concluded that the tec
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Book chapters on the topic "Riders to the sea (Synge, J.M.)"

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Hewitt, Seán. "‘A Black Knot’." In J. M. Synge. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198862093.003.0004.

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This chapter develops the tensions inherent in Synge’s early works towards an understanding of his formal innovation, asserting the ‘time pressure’ of his one-act plays as a dimension of his response to modernity. Synge’s drafts for various articles, particularly ‘The Old and New in Ireland’, and an article on social change in Wicklow, combine with his notes on Herbert Spencer and evolutionary theory to show a writer deeply conscious of modernization and literature’s responsiveness to modernity. Contributing to and drawing on new work on the spatial and temporal dimensions of modernism, this chapter shows that the structures and plots and Synge’s one-act plays Riders to the Sea and The Shadow of the Glen are rooted in a battle of temporalities. By comparing the timescales of Synge’s one-act plays to those of his Revivalist contemporaries, this chapter shows that his reading in sociology, philosophy, and evolutionary science, alongside his experiences in the modernizing ‘Congested Districts’ of Ireland, fundamentally affected his literary output. Fractured communal relations are figured as fractures in the time frames of the drama, and the overlapping of temporalities and levels of modernization find their correlatives in the constant and unresolved competition for dominance from any one conception of time. These plays, far from being isolated from the concerns of modernization, or from reverting to a solely romanticized vision of the peasantry, in fact register a sense of formal instability as a result of their fraught and multiple conceptions of time and space.
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Frawley, Oona. "The Shadow of the Glen and Riders to the Sea." In The Cambridge Companion to J. M. Synge. Cambridge University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ccol9780521110105.002.

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