Skip to product information
1 of 1

Psyche and Symbol in the Theater of Federico Garcia Lorca: Perlimplin, Yerma, Blood Wedding

- 234 Pages
Published: 01/01/1974

Regular price £24.39
Regular price £19.99 Sale price £24.39
Sale Sold out
Condition
Share this product with your friends.
  • Summary
  • Author
  • Product Details
  • Review

Symbol and psyche are twin concepts in contemporary symbological studies, where the symbol is considered to be a statement by the psyche. The psyche is a manifold of conscious and unconscious contents, and the symbol is their mediator. Because Lorca's dramatic characters are psychic entities made up of both conscious and unconscious elements, they unfold, grow, and meet their fate in a dense realm of shifting symbols. In Psyche and Symbol in the Theater of Federico Garcia Lorca, Rupert Allen analyzes symbologically three dramatic works of Lorca. He has found Perlimplin to be a good deal more complex in both psyche and symbol than it has been admitted to be. Yerma involves psychological complications that have not been considered in the light of modern critical analysis, and the symbolic reaches of Blood Wedding have until this book remained largely unexplored. Lorca was no stranger to the agony of creation, and this struggle sometimes appears symbolically in the form of his dramatic characters. Both Yerma and Blood Wedding reflect specific problems underlying the creative act, for they are translations into the realm of sexuality of the creative turmoil experienced by Lorca the poet. Perlimplin portrays the paradoxical suicide as a self-murder born out of the futile attempt to create not a poem, but a self. Previous criticism of these three plays has been dominated by critical assumptions that are transcended by Lorca's own twentieth-century mentality. Allen's analysis provides a new view of Lorca as a dramatist and presents new material to students of symbology.