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Aran Islands

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ISBN-10: 1409962075

ISBN-13: 9781409962076

Edition: N/A

Authors: John M. Synge, Jack B. Yeats, Edward J. O'Brien

List price: $15.99
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Description:

Edmund John Millington Synge (1871-1909) was an Irish playwright, poet, prose writer, and collector of folklore. He was one of the cofounders of the Abbey Theatre. Synge wrote many well known plays, including Riders to the Sea (1904), which is often considered to be his strongest literary work. He is best known for the play The Playboy of the Western World (1907), which caused riots during its opening run at the Abbey theatre. He suffered from Hodgkin's disease, a form of cancer at the time untreatable. He died just weeks short of his 38th birthday and was at the time trying to complete his last play, The Last Black Supper. Other works include: In the Shadow of the Glen (1903), The Well of…    
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Book details

List price: $15.99
Publisher: Dodo Press
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 170
Size: 6.00" wide x 9.00" long x 0.39" tall
Weight: 0.572
Language: English

After graduating from Trinity College, Dublin, Synge left for Europe to write poetry. If W. B. Yeats had not discovered him in Paris and persuaded him to return to Ireland and absorb its native traditions, the Irish renaissance might have lost its best playwright. As it was, Synge's poetry of Celtic romanticism was rather more tempered with a European realism than Yeats and his renaissance had anticipated. Yeats sent Synge to the West of Ireland to get to know the peasants there. The result was, in addition to the journal The Aran Islands (1907), two short plays for the Abbey: The Shadow of the Glen (1903), in which a comic resurrection interrupts a widow's marriage bargaining, and Riders…