The present paper attempts to address Sam Shepard’s treatment of American family in Buried Child focusing on 'world construction.' In order to explore the process of world creation in the play, the writers draw on the works of Marie-Laure Ryan, a key theorist in 'possible worlds theory,' one of the orientations in cognitive poetics. Considering Shepard's highlighting of the bonds among the family members figuring in his plays, the interactions of characters with Textual Actual World (henceforth TAW) are of paramount importance and contribute to what Ryan calls 'tellability.' Central to our analysis is the consideration of the characters’ private worlds’ interactions and their intrafamilial and extrafamilial conflicts. Shepard is als...
This paper attempts to render some vivid postmodernist features in Shepard's True West (1980), which...
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: "THE NIGHTMARE OF THE NATION": SAM SHEPARD AND THE PARADOX OF AMER...
Buried Child by Sam Shepard was first presented in 1978, and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. With ...
This study is a qualitative research that was conducted to analyze the escapism of Dodge’s in Sam Sh...
Shepard is peculiarly powerful in his symbolic family problem plays: True West, Buried Child and Cur...
The article reflects upon Sam Shepard’s playwrighting in the opening decades of the twenty-first cen...
One of the reasons for writing this thesis was to help readers and theatregoers better understand Sh...
In this research, we have tried to introduce the familiar components for a better understanding of n...
Includes bibliographical references and index."Sam Shepard has so often been called the preeminent p...
The family trilogy, Curse of the Starving Class, Buried Child and True West, presents Sam Shepard's...
Sam Shepard is inarguably one of the most influential (and successful) contemporary American playwri...
Sam Shepard is a playwright who provides extensive stage directions for his actors. Although many li...
In the contents of this thesis can be found an analysis of the work of Sam Shepard, modern American ...
As Shepard creates myths of the modern world in his plays, Patraka and Siegel use these myths to cat...
Alienation and loss appear as a pivotal theme in the majority of Sam Shepard’s family plays. This st...
This paper attempts to render some vivid postmodernist features in Shepard's True West (1980), which...
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: "THE NIGHTMARE OF THE NATION": SAM SHEPARD AND THE PARADOX OF AMER...
Buried Child by Sam Shepard was first presented in 1978, and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. With ...
This study is a qualitative research that was conducted to analyze the escapism of Dodge’s in Sam Sh...
Shepard is peculiarly powerful in his symbolic family problem plays: True West, Buried Child and Cur...
The article reflects upon Sam Shepard’s playwrighting in the opening decades of the twenty-first cen...
One of the reasons for writing this thesis was to help readers and theatregoers better understand Sh...
In this research, we have tried to introduce the familiar components for a better understanding of n...
Includes bibliographical references and index."Sam Shepard has so often been called the preeminent p...
The family trilogy, Curse of the Starving Class, Buried Child and True West, presents Sam Shepard's...
Sam Shepard is inarguably one of the most influential (and successful) contemporary American playwri...
Sam Shepard is a playwright who provides extensive stage directions for his actors. Although many li...
In the contents of this thesis can be found an analysis of the work of Sam Shepard, modern American ...
As Shepard creates myths of the modern world in his plays, Patraka and Siegel use these myths to cat...
Alienation and loss appear as a pivotal theme in the majority of Sam Shepard’s family plays. This st...
This paper attempts to render some vivid postmodernist features in Shepard's True West (1980), which...
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: "THE NIGHTMARE OF THE NATION": SAM SHEPARD AND THE PARADOX OF AMER...
Buried Child by Sam Shepard was first presented in 1978, and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. With ...