Lorca: The House of Bernarda Alba: A Drama of Women in the Villages of Spain (Aris & Phillips Hispanic Classics)

by Salvador Ortiz-Carboneres and Eric Southworth

Michael Jones (Editor)

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Book cover for Lorca: The House of Bernarda Alba: A Drama of Women in the Villages of Spain

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La casa de Bernarda Alba (The House of Bernarda Alba) was one of the last plays to be written by Lorca, shortly before he was executed by the Franco regime at the age of 38, in 1936. It was not performed until 1945 several years after his death. Along with Blood Wedding and Yerma it forms Lorca's Rural Trilogy. The play is based around five daughters who live with their fearsome and tyrannical mother. The daughters have been kept sheltered from the opposite sex, but the arrival of a suitor after their father's death catapults the family into a downward spiral of sexual jealousy and death. The play explores themes of sexual oppression, passion, and conformity, and examines women's lives in Spain at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century. Bernarda's cruel tyranny over her daughters foreshadows the stifling nature of Franco's fascist regime, which was to arrive just a few weeks after Lorca finished writing his play. The introduction by Eric Southworth addresses the main issues of the play and the issues involved in translating it.
  • ISBN13 9780856687945
  • Publish Date 2 April 2009
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Aris & Phillips Ltd
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 208
  • Language Spanish