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This collection features four new plays about war, tyranny and
discrimination by Eastern and Central European writers. Includes
the plays The Body of a Woman as a battlefield in the Bosnian war
by Matei Visniec, Cordon by Nebojsa Romcevic, When I want to
whistle, I whistle... by Andreea Valean, Soap Opera by Gyoergy
Spiro The title of this volume alludes to the history of political
double-dealing in a troubled region within southern Europe,
surrounded by the Adriatic, Aegean and Black Seas. G.B. Shaw wrote
Arms and The Man about a small Balkan plot in the 19th century.
It's in this tradition, rather than in a geographical sense that we
use the title Balkan Plots. The plays in this volume are dramatic
works which have emerged from, or which take as their subject
matter, the struggle of individuals within societies affected by
recent political upheaval. The writers explore aspects of freedom
and rebellion, ethnicity and discrimination, loyalty and betrayal
in situations where conventional attitudes and beliefs are severely
tested. In some plays, the conflict is between traditional
socialist attitudes and western capitalism. In others, the values
and beliefs of the younger generation collide with and challenge
those of the older generation. Within each of the plays, the way in
which the personal and the political interacts, is very much in
evidence.
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