La estética de la resistencia

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Argitaletxe Hiru, 1999 - 1087 páginas
Historia de la epopeya de un proletariado que emerge con fuerza desde la solidaridad y el internacionalismo para cambiar la base del mundo, una verdadera epopeya de la revolución, cuyos comienzos más cercanos están en la Comuna de París. Weiss describe minuciosamente a los trabajadores iluminados por las obras de arte que ven ante sus ojos y goza con ellos la estructura del friso de Pérgamo en Berlín, o La Balsa de la Medusa de Géricault, o la Sagrada Familia de Barcelona, cuando llegan a combatir en las Brigadas Internacionales.

Sobre el autor (1999)

In December 1965 Peter Weiss's Marat/Sade (1964), in a presentation by Britain's Royal Shakespeare Company, stormed the Broadway stage, captivating audience and critic alike. The assumption that the play about the murder of Marat by Charlotte Corday might have been one of the many dramatic pieces written by Sade---and enacted by his fellow inmates for "therapeutic" reasons during the Marquis's confinement at Charenton---provided Weiss (who maintained that "every word I put down is political") with his framework for the "confrontation of the revolutionary Marat as the apostle of social improvement and the cynical individualist, the Marquis de Sade" (N.Y. Times). The Investigation (1965), which Weiss considered his best play, was first presented in 20 theaters in East and West Germany; Ingmar Bergman (see Vol. 3) was its Swedish director. It was staged in New York in 1966. Taken almost entirely from the actual proceedings of the 1965 Frankfurt War Crimes Tribunal on Auschwitz, The Investigation is a "harrowing but insistently commanding experience" (Walter Kerr, N.Y. Times). The audience, in effect, reenacts the role of the original courtroom spectators in this shattering, true account of man's depravity. Weiss received the Buchner Prize in 1982.

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