Home > Dutchman Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > LeRoi Jones' Dutchman: A Brief Ride on a Doomed Ship

Dutchman | LeRoi Jones' Dutchman: A Brief Ride on a Doomed Ship

In this excerpt, Hugh Nelson compares Jones' play to the legend of the Flying Dutchman. He also explains how the playwright employs facets of the legend to create both modern myth and contemporary truth.

Leroi Jones describes the setting for his short play, Dutchman, with a significant metaphor: "In the flying underbelly of the city. Steaming hot, and summer on top, outside. Underground. The subway heaped in modern myth." The play's title supplemented by these provocative hints and allusions would lead one to believe that the action might be illuminated by examining it in terms of the various renderings of the legend of "the Flying Dutchman. " It is my feeling that Jones has made complex use of the "Dutchman" theme in converting it into modern myth. The two major figures,...

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