Home > True West Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Cain, Canaanites, and Philistines in Sam Shepard's True West
True West | Cain, Canaanites, and Philistines in Sam Shepard's True West
In this essay, Hoeper outlines the parallels between Shepard's True West and the biblical parable of Cain and Abel, comparing the two tales of sibling rivalry.
"Myth speaks to everything at once, especially the emotions," writes Sam Shepard (American Dreams-The Imagination of Sam Shepard, edited by Bonnie Maranca, [New York], 1981). Acting on this indirect authorial invitation, critics have understandably devoted much attention to the mythic elements in Shepard's work. Most notably, Tucker Orbison has exposed three levels of mythic response in True West: the mythic West of the cowboy; the mythic "mystery of the artist" in which the writer delves into the self to explore archetypal conflicts "fraught with the terrors of...
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