Criticism > Drama Criticism > Our Town, Thornton Wilder - Francis Fergusson (essay date 1956)
Our Town, Thornton Wilder - Francis Fergusson (essay date 1956)
Francis Fergusson (essay date 1956)
SOURCE: Fergusson, Francis. “Three Allegorists: Brecht, Wilder, and Eliot.” In Critical Essays on Thornton Wilder, edited by Martin Blank, pp. 61-71. New York: G. K. Hall & Co., 1996.
[In the following essay, originally published in 1956, Fergusson compares the use of allegory by Thornton Wilder, Bertolt Brecht, and T. S. Eliot, focusing especially on Wilder's Our Town and The Skin of Our Teeth.]
I
A number of contemporary playwrights, of whom Brecht, Wilder and Eliot are among the most accomplished, are now writing some form of allegory. They reject the tradition of modern realism, perhaps because little remains to be done with direct reflections of contemporary life: the pathos of the lost individual or the decaying suburb has been done to death since Chekhov. They do not seek some form of theater-poetry based on folk forms or myths or rituals, or on symbolism on the analogy of the...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
- Criticism: Author Commentary
-
Criticism: Our Town (1938)
- Hap Erstein (review date 23 November 1990)
- T. H. McCulloh (review date 2 April 1993)
- Malcolm Johnson (review date 23 July 1994)
- T. H. McCulloh (review date 9 December 1995)
- Critical Commentary
- Arthur H. Ballet (essay date 1956)
- Francis Fergusson (essay date 1956)
- George D. Stephens (essay date February 1959)
- Helmut Papajewski (essay date 1961)
- Winfield Townley Scott (essay date 1961)
- Malcolm Goldstein (essay date 1965)
- Donald Haberman (essay date 1967)
- Jan Austell (essay date 1968)
- Michael A. D'Ambrosio (essay date October 1971)
- John V. Hagopian and Arvin R. Wells (essay date 1971)
- Donald Haberman (essay date 1996)
- Bert Cardullo (essay date September 1998)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
