The plot of Brian Friel’s Molly Sweeney oscillates around the theme of perception, blindness and eye-sight recovery. Although visually impaired, the eponymous character is a self-reliant and independent person who is very active, both professionally and socially. What serves as the source of tragedy in the play is the male desire to compensate for Molly’s physical disability perceived as a sign of deficiency and oddity that needs to be normalized. Prompted by her husband, Molly decides to undergo a surgery which gives her a chance to regain sight and, thus, become a part of the world of the visually abled. Yet, subsequent to the operation, Molly cannot adapt herself to the new reality and develops a medical condition called blindsight, whic...
This article traces the motif of the blind man made to see, also known as the Molyneux problem, from...
Cuchulain's story is the play within the play, the hero's tragedy within the burlesque comedy of the...
England is home to a distinctive vernacular dance called Morris dance. One of the reasons that it is...
The plot of Brian Friel's Molly Sweeney oscillates around the theme of perception, blindness and eye...
This dissertation analyzes contemporary Irish playwright Brian Friel's dramatization of the doubly o...
Brian Friel' s Dancing at Lughnasa is, at one level, and particularly in its first half, an enliveni...
The staging of remembrance in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa invites us to see the stage as a spa...
This note considers a potential crux on the word 'reel' in Thomas Heywood and Richard Brome's The La...
University of Minnesota, Morris production of Dancing at Lughnasa by Brian Friel and directed by Ray...
Dancing at Lughnasa, narrated by a seanachie, Michael Mundy, does not reproduce the living world, it...
The character Ophelia, from William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, is an iconographic symbol and cultural emb...
The contemporary debate regarding the new languages of the stage has developed into multiple directi...
Behind much of Dorothy Livesay's poetry, the reader can clearly detect the rhythms and motions of th...
peer-reviewedThis thesis explores potential expressive possibilities in dance performance and choreo...
The strange behavior of the women of Yeats's late plays - Full Moon in March, King of the Great Cloc...
This article traces the motif of the blind man made to see, also known as the Molyneux problem, from...
Cuchulain's story is the play within the play, the hero's tragedy within the burlesque comedy of the...
England is home to a distinctive vernacular dance called Morris dance. One of the reasons that it is...
The plot of Brian Friel's Molly Sweeney oscillates around the theme of perception, blindness and eye...
This dissertation analyzes contemporary Irish playwright Brian Friel's dramatization of the doubly o...
Brian Friel' s Dancing at Lughnasa is, at one level, and particularly in its first half, an enliveni...
The staging of remembrance in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa invites us to see the stage as a spa...
This note considers a potential crux on the word 'reel' in Thomas Heywood and Richard Brome's The La...
University of Minnesota, Morris production of Dancing at Lughnasa by Brian Friel and directed by Ray...
Dancing at Lughnasa, narrated by a seanachie, Michael Mundy, does not reproduce the living world, it...
The character Ophelia, from William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, is an iconographic symbol and cultural emb...
The contemporary debate regarding the new languages of the stage has developed into multiple directi...
Behind much of Dorothy Livesay's poetry, the reader can clearly detect the rhythms and motions of th...
peer-reviewedThis thesis explores potential expressive possibilities in dance performance and choreo...
The strange behavior of the women of Yeats's late plays - Full Moon in March, King of the Great Cloc...
This article traces the motif of the blind man made to see, also known as the Molyneux problem, from...
Cuchulain's story is the play within the play, the hero's tragedy within the burlesque comedy of the...
England is home to a distinctive vernacular dance called Morris dance. One of the reasons that it is...