Difference between revisions of "Job Mava"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
by [[Don Maclennan]] in collaboration with the [[Ikhwezi Players]]. A fine one-act play, it is an existentialist re-reading of the biblical story of Job, with the difference that Job Mava does not suffer in silence or patiently, but eventually learns that suffering is inescapable and must be borne by each man, no matter who he might think himself to be. First written and performed in 1972/3, it was first published in ''[[Staffrider Vol. 3 No. 4]]'', December 1980/January 1981. (See [[Gosher]], 1988)
+
by [[Don Maclennan]] in collaboration with the [[Ikhwezi Players]]. A fine one-act play, it is an existentialist re-reading of the biblical story of Job, with the difference that Job Mava does not suffer in silence or patiently, but eventually learns that suffering is inescapable and must be borne by each man, no matter who he might think himself to be. First written and performed in 1972/3, it was first published in ''[[Staffrider]]'' Vol. 3 No. 4, December 1980/January 1981. (See [[ESAT Bibliography Gl-Go|Gosher]], 1988.)
  
  

Latest revision as of 20:07, 10 March 2018

by Don Maclennan in collaboration with the Ikhwezi Players. A fine one-act play, it is an existentialist re-reading of the biblical story of Job, with the difference that Job Mava does not suffer in silence or patiently, but eventually learns that suffering is inescapable and must be borne by each man, no matter who he might think himself to be. First written and performed in 1972/3, it was first published in Staffrider Vol. 3 No. 4, December 1980/January 1981. (See Gosher, 1988.)


Return to J

Return to South African Theatre Plays

Return to Main Page