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Shepard, Sam 1943–: Critical Essay by Thomas P. Adler

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Sam Shepard
About 1 pages (343 words)
Curse of the Starving Class Summary

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[In Curse of the Starving Class] Shepard displays some of the same anti-capitalistic bias and revolutionary fervor Shaw once did, but here without the novelty in form that is almost a trademark of Shepard's earlier plays. Nothing of the rock culture in this one; instead, we are given an old-fashioned, evidently autobiographical, family problem play, mostly naturalistic (though punctuated by poetic cadenzas) and so banal in its outlines as to make us wonder if this alltime favorite genre has not run its course….

I would like to report that the play works better and more creatively on the symbolic level, but here the imagery tends to excess. The empty refrigerator that the characters stare into with ritual regularity speaks not only of physical, but of emotional, cultural, and moral starvation as well. And Weston's parable of the eagle swooping down to gather up the sheep's testicles, and later latching onto and refusing to let go of the cat which claws at and devours it suggests the complex way in which the victim can become the predator. This family eats one another up as surely as society does. (p. 409)

This is a free excerpt of 188 words. There are 343 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Shepard, Sam 1943–: Critical Essay by Thomas P. Adler from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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