This essay approaches Cristina Escofet’s work from the theoretical concept of simulacra as proposed by Jean Baudrillard and as reflected in the writings of other critics and thinkers such as Judith Butler and Paul Virilio. Escofet emerges during an epoch of intense intellectual and emotional debate about the construction of an Argentine feminine identity. Her work stands out amongst her contemporaries for her creative analysis of the effects of simulacra on women. This article addresses all of Escofet’s plays in general and analyzes Ritos del corazón, ¿Qué pasó con Bette Davis? and Eternity Class. (JR
This dissertation focuses on the ideological continuity running through feminist dramaturgical texts...
This dissertation examines the interplay between patriarchal power structures impinging on different...
Ten years after the death of Jean Baudrillard, this paper aims to rethink the writings and thought o...
This essay approaches Cristina Escofet’s work from the theoretical concept of simulacra as proposed ...
The Dramatic Feminine Discourse of Cristina Escofet interrogates this author's use of language as a ...
The protagonist of Cristina Escofet’s Ritos del corazón is a writer who cannot escape the feminine m...
A personal reflection and a philosophical undertaking that delves into the nature of how romance in ...
This issue of Between aims to investigate the phenomenology of simulacra and their range of function...
In Angie Cervantes’s Ley seca (2007), seventeen-year-old Eva faces loneliness and social pressure as...
Ana Istarú’s Hombres en escabeche (2000) combines humor and serious commentary to break down the bin...
Martin Esslin’s The Theatre of the Absurd (1961) has been accepted as a seminal piece of work provid...
This article proposes an approximation of the dramatic writing produced by women in Argentina betwee...
Marina Tsvetaeva, Marguerite Yourcenar, and H.D. address the problems of female authority and author...
This study investigates the performance of gender in two plays by the Argentine writer, Gris...
Along with Samuel Beckett and Eugene Ionesco, Fernando Arrabal is a major exponent of the Theater of...
This dissertation focuses on the ideological continuity running through feminist dramaturgical texts...
This dissertation examines the interplay between patriarchal power structures impinging on different...
Ten years after the death of Jean Baudrillard, this paper aims to rethink the writings and thought o...
This essay approaches Cristina Escofet’s work from the theoretical concept of simulacra as proposed ...
The Dramatic Feminine Discourse of Cristina Escofet interrogates this author's use of language as a ...
The protagonist of Cristina Escofet’s Ritos del corazón is a writer who cannot escape the feminine m...
A personal reflection and a philosophical undertaking that delves into the nature of how romance in ...
This issue of Between aims to investigate the phenomenology of simulacra and their range of function...
In Angie Cervantes’s Ley seca (2007), seventeen-year-old Eva faces loneliness and social pressure as...
Ana Istarú’s Hombres en escabeche (2000) combines humor and serious commentary to break down the bin...
Martin Esslin’s The Theatre of the Absurd (1961) has been accepted as a seminal piece of work provid...
This article proposes an approximation of the dramatic writing produced by women in Argentina betwee...
Marina Tsvetaeva, Marguerite Yourcenar, and H.D. address the problems of female authority and author...
This study investigates the performance of gender in two plays by the Argentine writer, Gris...
Along with Samuel Beckett and Eugene Ionesco, Fernando Arrabal is a major exponent of the Theater of...
This dissertation focuses on the ideological continuity running through feminist dramaturgical texts...
This dissertation examines the interplay between patriarchal power structures impinging on different...
Ten years after the death of Jean Baudrillard, this paper aims to rethink the writings and thought o...