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Harold Pinter

    10 octobre 1930 – 24 décembre 2008

    Harold Pinter s'impose comme l'un des dramaturges les plus influents de l'époque moderne. Ses œuvres se caractérisent par des pauses et des silences théâtraux, un rythme comique, de l'ironie et une menace sous-jacente. Les drames de Pinter présentent souvent des conflits intenses entre des personnages ambivalents qui luttent pour la domination verbale et territoriale, ainsi que pour leurs propres versions du passé. Ses pièces, thématiquement ambiguës, explorent des questions complexes sur l'identité individuelle opprimée par les forces sociales, le langage et les vicissitudes de la mémoire.

    Harold Pinter
    No Man's Land
    Plays: One
    Plays : Four
    The Proust Screenplay
    Must You Go?
    Masters of the Universe? NATO's Balkan Crusade
    • NATO’s war on Yugoslavia in the spring of 1999 was unleashed in the name of democracy and human rights. This view was challenged by the world’s three largest countries, India, China and Russia, who saw the bombing of Serbia and Kosovo as a naked attempt to assert US dominance in an unstable world.In the West, media networks were joined by substantial sectors of left/liberal opinion in supporting the war. Nonetheless, a wide variety of figures emerged to challenge the prevailing consensus. Their work, gathered here for the first time, forms a collection of key statements and anti-war writings from some of democracy’s most eloquent dissidents—Noam Chomsky, Harold Pinter, Edward Said and many others—who provide carefully researched examinations of the real motives for the US action, dissections and critiques of the ideology of ‘humanitarian warfare’, and chartings of the unnecessary tragedy of a region laid to waste in the pursuance of Great Power politics.This reader presents some of the most important texts on NATO’s Balkan crusade and forms a major intervention in the debate on global geo-political strategy after the Cold War.

      Masters of the Universe? NATO's Balkan Crusade
      4,0
    • Must You Go?

      My Life with Harold Pinter

      • 360pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      A unique testimony to modern literature's most celebrated and enduring marriage.

      Must You Go?
      4,0
    • The Proust Screenplay

      À la recherche du temps perdu

      • 166pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      In the early 1970s Harold Pinter joined forces with director Joseph Losey and Proust scholar Barbara Bray to develop a screenplay of Proust's masterpiece, Remembrance of Things Past. Pinter took more than a year to conceive and write the screenplay and called the experience "the best working year of my life." Although never produced, Harold Pinter's The Proust Screenplay is considered one of the greatest adaptations for the cinema ever written.With fidelity to Proust's text, the screenplay is an extraordinary re-creation by one of the leading playwrights of our time. It is, in its way, a unique collaboration between two extraordinary writers united across more than half a century and two different cultures by a special concern for time and memory.

      The Proust Screenplay
      3,0
    • Plays : Four

      Old Times. No Man's Land. Betrayal. Monologue. Family Voices

      • 296pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      This volume contains the plays Harold Pinter wrote during the 1970s and 1980s: Old Times, No Man's Land, Betrayal, One for the Road, and Mountain Language. Also included is the one-act triple-bill Other Places, composed of Family Voices, A Kind of Alaska, and Victoria Station.

      Plays : Four
      4,1
    • Plays: One

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      This volume contains Harold Pinter's first six plays, including The Birthday Party. The Birthday Party Stanley Webber is visited in his boarding house by two strangers, Goldberg and McCann. An innocent-seeming birthday party for Stanley turns into a nightmare. 'Mr Pinter's terrifying blend of pathos and hatred fuses unforgettably into the stuff of art.' Sunday Times The Room and The Dumb Waiter In these two early one-act plays, Harold Pinter reveals himself as already in full control of his unique ability to make dramatic poetry of the banalities of everyday speech and the precision with which it defines character. 'Harold Pinter is the most original writer to have emerged from the new wave of dramatists who gave fresh life to the British theatre in the fifties and early sixties.' The Times The Hothouse The Hothouse was first produced in 1980, though Harold Pinter wrote the play in 1958, just before commencing work on The Caretaker. In this compelling study of bureaucratic power, we can see the full emergence of a great and original dramatic talent. 'The Hothouse is at once sinister and hilarious, suggesting an unholy alliance of Kafka and Feydeau.' Spectator

      Plays: One
      4,2
    • Do Hirst and Spooner really know each other, or are they performing an elaborate charade? The ambiguity - and the comedy - intensify with the arrival of Briggs and Foster. All four inhabit a no-man's-land between time present and time remembered, between reality and imagination.

      No Man's Land
      3,8
    • This revised edition of Harold Pinter's Plays 4 features his latest play, Celebration, and highlights Pinter as a leading figure in British drama during the latter half of the twentieth century, as noted by the Swedish Academy in his 2005 Nobel Prize citation.

      Plays. Vol.4. Betrayal; Monologue; One for the Road; Mountain Language; Family Voices; A Kind of Alaska; Victoria Station; Precisely; The New World Order; Party Time; Moonlight; Ashes to Ashes
      4,0
    • Harold Pinter Plays 2

      • 238pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      The second volume of Harold Pinter's collected work includes The Caretaker. The CaretakerIt was with this play that Harold Pinter had his first major success.

      Harold Pinter Plays 2
      3,9
    • Betrayal is Pinter's latest full-length play since the enormous success of No Man's Land. The play begins in 1977, with a meeting between adulterous lovers, Emma and Jerry, two years after their affair has ended. During the nine scenes of the play, we move back in time, through the states of their affair, with the play ending in the house of Emma and Robert, her husband, who is Jerry's best friend.The classic dramatic scenario of the love triangle is manifest in a mediation on the themes of marital infidelity, duplicity, and self-deception. Pinter writes a world that simultaneously glorifies and debases love.

      Betrayal
      4,0