In 1920 Thomas Wolfe left the South with the strong desire to
become a dramatist. To pursue his chosen craft, he enrolled in the
Harvard 47 Workshop, at that time the most renowned in the nation.
At first he wrote plays about Appalachian society and the Civil
War. But it was not until Wolfe turned to the modern South,
inspired by a disturbing return to his hometown of Asheville, North
Carolina, that his genius awoke. There he found the material he
would work into the best of his three full-length plays written at
Harvard, the material that in the next decade would be recast into
the novels that would make him famous. This is the first book
publication of Welcome to Our City, Thomas Wolfe's play in ten
scenes of a modern South ruled by liars and real estate agents,
overrun with boosterism, and dedicated to greed. This sprawling,
fiery work has lain dormant among Wolfe's papers for over fifty
years, abandoned by its author after an unsuccessful attempt to
revise and shorten it for a New York Theatre Guild production. For
this edition, Richard S. Kennedy has reassembled a full performance
text of the workshop version presented at Harvard in 1923, a
production that involved forty-five cast members, including over
thirty speaking parts, required seven stage changes, and lasted
over three and a half hours in performance. The action of Welcome
to Our City centers on a scheme of the town fathers and real estate
promoters of Altamont, a small southern city, to snatch up all the
property in a centrally located black district, evict the tenants,
tear down their houses and shops, and build a new white residential
section in its place. When the blacks, under the angry leadership
of a strong-willed doctor, resist eviction, a race riot breaks out,
shattering both the precarious social balance of the city and the
""progressive"" dreams of Altamont's boosters. Building on this
plot, Wolfe guides his audience through the back rooms, stately
homes, ans shanty towns of Altamont, contrasting tradition-bound
southern characters with a new breed of life drawn from the vast
menagerie of 1920s Main Street America: fact-spouting yes-men,
hypocritical religious leaders, anti-intellectual professors,
provincial country club matrons, and politicians inauthentic from
their heads to their feet. Welcome to Our City is not merely an
exhibit in the artistic development of a future novelist. Wolfe
used the dramatic form inventively and with considerable
inspiration to expose the culture of greed that he saw spreading
around him and to caricature the men who, he feared, would usher in
an age of mediocrity across America. Emotionally gripping and
mockingly satiric, Welcome to Our City captures the festering
social climate of the 1920s in a vision of life that is
uncomfortably relevant to our own times.
General
Imprint: |
Louisiana State University Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Series: |
Southern Literary Studies |
Release date: |
December 1983 |
First published: |
March 1999 |
Authors: |
Thomas Wolfe
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 10mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
277 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-8071-2503-8 |
Categories: |
Books >
Language & Literature >
Literature: texts >
Drama texts, plays >
General
|
LSN: |
0-8071-2503-2 |
Barcode: |
9780807125038 |
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