Aunt Ester's children redeemed : journeys to freedom in August Wilson's ten plays of twentieth-century Black America
(2017)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2017
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781498237819 (electronic bk.) MWT12320797, 1498237819 (electronic bk.) 12320797
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

August Wilson (1945-2005) wrote one play for every decade of the twentieth century that explored black life in America for the descendants of slaves. All of his characters seek wholeness, identity, and reconstituted selves after the terror of 250 years chattel slavery and its terrifying legacy. Their history, culture, wisdom, joys, triumphs, pain, sufferings, victories, weaknesses, and strengths are all embodied in one character, Aunt Ester. She is as old as the number of years blacks have been on these shores. All of the characters in the ten-play cycle are her children. Their search is through circumstance and adventure, certainly. This author demonstrates how Wilson uses language--poetry, the blues--to bring each play's characters to a point of wholeness, redemption, and freedom, not from history, but ennobled and strengthened by it. Wilson employs fundamental theological doctrines to exhort Aunt Ester's children to remember by whom and how they were freed and made whole

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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