Eugene O’Neill is the father of modern American drama. His masterpiece Long Day’s Journey into Night is one of the most famous plays in English literature. It is a play about a twentieth-century family and the grueling realities it had to face. It is a semi-autobiographical play that concerns with the Tyrone family. There are four main characters in the play. The father and the mother and their two sons Jamie and Edmund. Apparently, the family seems to be a happy one but the harsh reality is that they are bind to each other not only by hope and love but also by guilt, anger, and their pasts. The story deals with the mother’s addiction to morphine, the father’s covetousness, the older brother’s self-indulgence, and the younger brother’s illn...
Purpose. The article is devoted to the symbolic functions of the lexeme «fog» in belles-letters. Thi...
Brien, DL ORCiD: 0000-0002-9005-3645; Mcallister, MM ORCiD: 0000-0003-1181-1610Fog in August is a Ge...
Arthur Miller and Eugene Gladstone O'Neill both established themselves as major theatrical icons in ...
Eugene O’Neill is the father of modern American drama. His masterpiece Long Day’s Journey into Night...
Dysfunctional family is a term in psychology to describe a troubled family due to either internal o...
Linguistic distances, intimate and vast. Fog as a metaphor for cultural disconnect
“The past is the present, isn’t it? It is the future too. We all try to lie out of that but life won...
[[abstract]]This paper closely examines the forces of the past in Eugene O'Neill's famous play, Long...
This paper is to present the metaphorical aspects of Eugene O’Neill‘s selected plays. Revising the d...
Although much research has been written on the idea of substance abuse in the American theater, this...
The disparity of style and quality between O'Neill's early (1920-1932) and later (1932-1940) plays i...
Long Day’s Journey into Night is Eugene O’Neill’s attempt to come to terms with the pain he suffered...
Since its premiere in Stockholm in the winter of 1956, Long Day\u27s Journey Into Night has been the...
In The Great God Brown and in Mourning Becomes Electra, two of his prominent mask plays, Eugene O’Ne...
This article analyses the ways in which air is combined to water to generate mist or fog in three no...
Purpose. The article is devoted to the symbolic functions of the lexeme «fog» in belles-letters. Thi...
Brien, DL ORCiD: 0000-0002-9005-3645; Mcallister, MM ORCiD: 0000-0003-1181-1610Fog in August is a Ge...
Arthur Miller and Eugene Gladstone O'Neill both established themselves as major theatrical icons in ...
Eugene O’Neill is the father of modern American drama. His masterpiece Long Day’s Journey into Night...
Dysfunctional family is a term in psychology to describe a troubled family due to either internal o...
Linguistic distances, intimate and vast. Fog as a metaphor for cultural disconnect
“The past is the present, isn’t it? It is the future too. We all try to lie out of that but life won...
[[abstract]]This paper closely examines the forces of the past in Eugene O'Neill's famous play, Long...
This paper is to present the metaphorical aspects of Eugene O’Neill‘s selected plays. Revising the d...
Although much research has been written on the idea of substance abuse in the American theater, this...
The disparity of style and quality between O'Neill's early (1920-1932) and later (1932-1940) plays i...
Long Day’s Journey into Night is Eugene O’Neill’s attempt to come to terms with the pain he suffered...
Since its premiere in Stockholm in the winter of 1956, Long Day\u27s Journey Into Night has been the...
In The Great God Brown and in Mourning Becomes Electra, two of his prominent mask plays, Eugene O’Ne...
This article analyses the ways in which air is combined to water to generate mist or fog in three no...
Purpose. The article is devoted to the symbolic functions of the lexeme «fog» in belles-letters. Thi...
Brien, DL ORCiD: 0000-0002-9005-3645; Mcallister, MM ORCiD: 0000-0003-1181-1610Fog in August is a Ge...
Arthur Miller and Eugene Gladstone O'Neill both established themselves as major theatrical icons in ...