Difference between revisions of "Faustus in Africa"

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by [[William Kentridge]] and the [[Handspring Puppet Company]]. See ''[[Faust]]''.
 
by [[William Kentridge]] and the [[Handspring Puppet Company]]. See ''[[Faust]]''.
 
  
 
== The original text ==
 
== The original text ==
 
The legend of Faust is based on the story of the sixteenth-century learned scholar who squandered his fortune and then sold his soul to the devil in exchange for additional time to search for the meaning of existence through travel and indulgences. After making his pact with the devil, Handspring’s Faustus goes on a safari. Indulging in elaborate feasts and buying sprees, Faustus attempts to consume all that Africa has to offer. Transposed to Africa his desires become those of the archetypal greedy colonialist – his victims the African people and their land. [http://www.handspringpuppet.co.za/handspring-productions/faustus-in-africa/]
 
The legend of Faust is based on the story of the sixteenth-century learned scholar who squandered his fortune and then sold his soul to the devil in exchange for additional time to search for the meaning of existence through travel and indulgences. After making his pact with the devil, Handspring’s Faustus goes on a safari. Indulging in elaborate feasts and buying sprees, Faustus attempts to consume all that Africa has to offer. Transposed to Africa his desires become those of the archetypal greedy colonialist – his victims the African people and their land. [http://www.handspringpuppet.co.za/handspring-productions/faustus-in-africa/]
 
 
==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==
  

Revision as of 09:26, 4 July 2014

by William Kentridge and the Handspring Puppet Company. See Faust.

The original text

The legend of Faust is based on the story of the sixteenth-century learned scholar who squandered his fortune and then sold his soul to the devil in exchange for additional time to search for the meaning of existence through travel and indulgences. After making his pact with the devil, Handspring’s Faustus goes on a safari. Indulging in elaborate feasts and buying sprees, Faustus attempts to consume all that Africa has to offer. Transposed to Africa his desires become those of the archetypal greedy colonialist – his victims the African people and their land. [1]

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

Sources

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