Abstract

From 1880 onwards there developed in the German theatre two alternative routes to modern tragedy. One was through Hebbel and Ibsen, the other through Georg Büchner. The playwright in whom both routes converged was Gerhart Hauptmann, who has been generally recognised as the leading naturalist writer in the German theatre between 1875 and 1900. Initially influenced by Ibsen, Hauptmann’s famous political drama The Weavers (1885) shows an unmistakable turn in the direction of Büchner, whom Hauptmann had read but never seen performed. Indeed, although Büchner preceded Ibsen historically speaking, his literary impact postdates him. Büchner’s two major works, Danton’s Death and Woyzeck, both written in the 1830s, were not produced for the stage until the turn of the century some seventy years later. By that time Ibsen had already made a tremendous impact on German drama and Hauptmann’s reputation as Germany’s leading dramatist had already been established. Yet the posthumous emergence of Büchner drastically altered the course of German drama. The initial development of the so-called ‘Naturalist’ school of drama, both as a source of plays and as a critical movement, waned after 1900 as Strindberg’s work made its mark and as the plays of Frank Wedekind hastened the transition to Expressionism. While Büchner was clearly influential in the development of Expressionism, he was also instrumental in the development of the new political theatre of Piscator and Brecht which superseded it. Indeed his seminal influence on the development of modern drama has been as great, in its own way, as that of Ibsen.KeywordsModern SocietyPolitical TheatreGerman TheatreDramatic FormGestural TheatreThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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