Tom Stoppard: Bucking the Postmodern
Daniel Keith Jernigan
Tom Stoppard: Bucking the Postmodern
Daniel Keith Jernigan
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While much of Tom Stoppard’s early work (Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead and The Real Inspector Hound, for instance) is postmodern, the remainder of his career essentially tracks backward from there–becoming
late modernist
in the 1970s (Travesties) and fully modernist in the 80s and 90s (The Real Thing and Arcadia). This pattern also makes sense of Stoppard’s recent and uncharacteristic foray into dramatic realism with The Coast of Utopia (2002) and Rock ‘n’ Roll (2006). The playwright seems to embrace what he sees as the more straightforward rhetorical advantages of literary realism.
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