Topdog/Underdog | Style
Naturalism
Topdog/Underdog is less fantastic than some of Parks’s other plays. Though the set design evokes social realism, the play is naturalistic in the sense that Lincoln and Booth respond to the environmental forces, such as poverty, that shape their lives externally, as well as to the private desires and ambitions that exert an equal, if not greater, force psychically. The brothers are subject to deterministic sociological and economic forces that lead them to contemplate a life of petty crime. Furthermore, Booth’s frank discussions of his sexual...
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- Topdog/Underdog: Introduction
- Topdog/Underdog: Summary
- Topdog/Underdog: Suzan-Lori Parks Biography
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- Topdog/Underdog: Style
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