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The Social Significance of the Modern Drama

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About This Book

The author contends that modern dramatic art rejects art for art's sake and serves as a mirror of social life, exposing hypocrisy, duty, and institutional falsehoods while engaging audiences more effectively than polemics. A foreword and organized chapters survey national schools and major dramatists across Scandinavia, Germany, France, England, Ireland, and Russia, analyzing representative plays and their treatment of social wrongs, personal sacrifice, and moral conflict. The essay argues that socially conscious drama can awaken intellectuals, challenge entrenched assumptions, and prepare publics for social change, and it notes the relative undevelopment of a native American social drama to date.

About the Author

Goldman, Emma portrait

Emma Goldman

Emma Goldman (1869–1940) was a prominent anarchist political activist and writer known for her passionate advocacy of individual freedom and social justice. Born in Lithuania, she emigrated to the United States, where she became a leading figure in the anarchist movement. Goldman's works, such as "Anarchism and Other Essays" and "My Disillusionment in Russia," reflect her critiques of state power and her vision for a society based on mutual aid and voluntary cooperation. Throughout her life, she championed women's rights, labor rights, and free speech, leaving a lasting impact on political thought and activism.

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