Abstract

Sam Shepard's The Tooth of Crime has been praised for its striking originality of conception, particularly its unique use of language, music, and spectacle. A few critics have noted, however, that beneath the novel surface lies a more conventional play, a tragedy of classical proportions. Indeed, Tooth does contain a number of features common to classic tragedies, including a larger‐than‐life hero who has become isolated from the community, the hero's gradual discovery of his own human limitations, and the violation and reestablishment of a political order. Unlike Shepard's other protagonists, who are portrayed in what Shepard calls “a fractured whole,”; Hoss is a recognizable and coherent character, a doomed “king,”; who recalls such classic tragic figures as Sophocles’ Oedipus and Shakespeare's Richard II. Like them, he is flawed and doomed, but like them, too, he is admirable, and out of the admiration we come to feel for him, Shepard builds a tragedy for our times. In this regard, Tooth is, paradoxica...

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