Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Shepard, Sam (Vol. 169) - David Wyatt (essay date spring 1992)
Shepard, Sam (Vol. 169) - David Wyatt (essay date spring 1992)
David Wyatt (essay date spring 1992)
SOURCE: Wyatt, David. “Shepard's Split.” South Atlantic Quarterly 91, no. 2 (spring 1992): 333-60.
[In the following essay, Wyatt explores the ambivalence of the characters and the world view in Shepard's body of work.]
Sam Shepard does not write dramas of recognition. His characters renounce insight and resist growth; they seem, instead, the scene for their author's projection of violent, contradictory, inchoate emotions. Shepard's language remains acutely aware of this, but it is an awareness in which the characters scarcely participate. Few of the characters believe in any existence apart from a role, and one purpose of the plays is to explore this. Yet it also seems a limit by which the characters are bound, a repetitive irony through which the playwright asserts his superiority over his players. The conception of life is essentially dramatic, as Richard Gilman argued about Shepard in...
[The entire page is 11107 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Robert Brustein (review date 27 January 1986)
- Gerald Weales (review date 14 February 1986)
- David Wyatt (essay date spring 1992)
- Donald L. Carveth (essay date fall 1992)
- Robert B. Heilman (essay date fall 1992)
- Sam Shepard and Carol Rosen (interview date March 1993)
- Susanne Willadt (essay date March 1993)
- Robert Brustein (review date 2 January 1995)
- Robert Brustein (essay date 15-22 July 1996)
- Sam Shepard and Stephanie Coen (interview date September 1996)
- Francis King (review date 16 November 1996)
- Don Shewey (essay date July/August 1997)
- Susan Harris Smith (essay date 1998)
- Sam Shepard and Michael Phillips (interview date 8 November 2000)
- Michael Phillips (review date 17 November 2000)
- Katherine Duncan-Jones (review date 23 July 2001)
- Ann Wilson (essay date 2001)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
