Rhinocéros (Eugène Ionesco play)
- Sort Name
- Rhinocéros
- Type
- Stage play
- Language
- French
- Ratings
- No reviews
Wikipedia
Rhinoceros (French: Rhinocéros) is a play by playwright Eugène Ionesco, written in 1959. The play was included in Martin Esslin's essay on post-war avant-garde drama "The Theatre of the Absurd", although scholars have also rejected this label as too interpretatively narrow. Over the course of three acts, the inhabitants of a small, provincial French town turn into rhinoceroses; ultimately the only human who does not succumb to this mass metamorphosis is the central character, Bérenger, a flustered everyman figure who is initially criticized in the play for his drinking, tardiness, and slovenly lifestyle and then, later, for his increasing paranoia and obsession with the rhinoceroses. The play is often read as a response and criticism to the sudden upsurge of Fascism and Nazism during the events preceding World War II, and explores the themes of conformity, culture, fascism, responsibility, logic, mass movements, mob mentality, philosophy and morality.
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Relationships
- Rhinocéros(Eugène Ionesco play) has translation Die Nashörner
- Rhinocéros(Eugène Ionesco play) was written by Eugène Ionesco
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- Last Modified
- 2024-07-05