Description
Book SynopsisThis book deals with the process of negotiation with the past in the present through the plays of Marina Carr. The title frames the work, connoting the path towards destruction and the sense of lethargy acquired along the way. The book offers an in-depth and extensive reading of Carr’s plays. In doing so, it surveys some of the destructive issues represented in the works and provides a series of social and cultural contexts to which the concerns in the works are related.
Carr is best known for her trilogy,
The Mai,
Portia Coughlan and
By the Bog of Cats…, and more recently
Woman and Scarecrow,
The Cordelia Dream and
Marble. The plays are regularly concerned with notions of identity in the context of self-destruction, self-estrangement and displacement. This book applies Julia Kristeva’s theory of abjection to Carr’s plays in an effort to structure the loss the author identifies in the works. Themes of memory, history and myth are examined in the context of these concerns in provocative and confrontational ways.
Table of ContentsContents: Unnatural Blood - The Early Plays,
Ullaloo and
Low in the Dark, the foundations of abjection, also discussed in
Woman and Scarecrow – Coagulated Blood, Congealed Blood, Mixed Blood - Abjection and the role of the mother, Cultural memory and history in the context of Carr’s trilogy – The One Blood - Incest – Streaked Blood - Destructive genealogy – Sacrificial Blood -
Ariel,
The Cordelia Dream - crossings internalised in corporeal, psychic and abject ways.
Marble - managing loss, melancholic boundaries of negotiation.