Techniques of Slave Narrative Used by August Wilson In His Plays
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61841/p0zvp850Keywords:
slavery, survival, narrationAbstract
This paper aims to focus on the importance of using the slave narrative technique by August Wilson in his plays to showcase the true emotions of the black people. We know how he uses this particular technique in all of his ten plays. This technique that Wilson uses in his plays has set him out amongst other African American writers. Wilson has used it in his plays not just to inform people but to remind the people of atrocities their ancestors have faced in the white society. His works clearly show what he wanted to achieve as a writer—not just fame but answers from the white society—and to inform his audiences about the life experiences of a black person. And how Wilson has achieved to connect with his black audiences with his stories.
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References
1. Wilson, August. The Piano Lesson. New York: Theatre Communications Group, 2007.
2. Maley, P. Performing Ancestry: Reading August Wilson‟s The Piano Lesson as a Performative NeoSlave Narrative. Comparative Drama, 2019.
3. Wilson, August. Gem of the Ocean. New York: Theatre Communications Group, 2006.
4. Elkins, Marilyn, ed. August Wilson: A Casebook. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc.,1994.
5. Boan, Devon. “Call-and-Response: Parallel „Slave Narrative‟ in August Wilson‟s The Piano Lesson.”
African American Review 32
6. Theodore, Emmanuel J. Dark Symphony in America. New York: Free Press, 1968.
7. John, Ernest. The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative. JanuaShannon, Sandra G.
The Dramatic Vision of August Wilson. Howard University Press, 1994.
8. Snodgrass, Mary Ellen. August Wilson: A Literary Companion, McFarland, 2004.ry 2014.
9. Bigsby, Christopher, ed. The Cambridge Companion to August Wilson. New York:
10. Cambridge University Press, 2007
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