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TWO PSYCHOTIC PLAYWRIGHTS AT WORK: THE LATE PLAYS OF AUGUST STRINDBERG AND TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
Authors:GEORGE MANDELBAUM
Affiliation:Former Associate Professor of English Literature and Humanities at Mercy College in New York and former Visiting Scholar at the William Alanson White Institute. He has taught courses at the New York Psychoanalytic Society and at W.A.W. and co‐teaches a class to psychiatry residents at Mount Sinai‐Beth Israel Hospital.
Abstract:August Strindberg and Tennessee Williams both became severely deranged during their playwriting careers. Both emerged from the most intense form of their derangement and wrote plays afterward. Strindberg, however, wrote his greatest plays after his psychosis; Williams, before his. Strindberg's psychosis spurred his creativity; that of Williams severely damaged his. This paper proposes that Strindberg mastered his psychosis and that in his late plays he dramatically symbolized psychotic processes. Williams, on the other hand, could neither access nor master his, and his late plays embody the repeated, unsymbolized acting out of his psychosis within an aesthetic context. These differences between the two playwrights become clear not through analysis of dramatic characters, but through changes that each playwright made to the dramatic medium itself.
Keywords:August Strindberg  Tennessee Williams  creativity  madness  father  playwrights  autobiography  affect  psychosis  symbolization  symmetry  camp
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