
La rinascita della tragedia dallo spirito del blues nel teatro di August Wilson
Author(s) -
Valentina Rapetti
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
le simplegadi
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1824-5226
DOI - 10.17456/simple-163
Subject(s) - drama , blues , harmony (color) , art , altar , prologue , literature , ethos , tragedy (event) , archetype , philosophy , art history , humanities , visual arts , linguistics
Born in 1945 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, August Wilson was the most prolific and represented African American playwright of the twentieth century. His Century Cycle, a series of ten plays that chronicle the lives of African Americans from the early 1900s to the late 1990s, is an expression of Wilson’s spiritual realism, a form of drama that, while adhering to some conventions of the Western realist tradition, also introduces elements of innovation inspired by blues music and Yoruba cosmology. This essay analyses the double cultural genealogy of Wilson’s work to show how, despite respecting the Aristotelian principle of mìmesis, his playwriting draws on a quintessentially black aesthetic. In conceiving of theatre as a ritualistic performative context where music and words intertwine, Wilson restored what Friedrich Nietzsche regarded as the authentic spirit of Greek tragedy – the harmony between Dionysian and Apollonian – while at the same time injecting an African American ethos into the Western theatrical canon.