In this Issue
Eugene O’Neill’s entire life revolved around the stage, and his productivity as a dramatist—some twenty long plays in less than twenty-five years (1920–1943)—remains a remarkable achievement. O’Neill’s plays are known for their intensely personal qualities, their dark realism, and their tragic honesty. O’Neill is the only American playwright ever to receive a Nobel Prize in Literature and is recognized as having helped to establish America as a center of theatrical output and creativity.
published by
Penn State University Pressviewing issue
Volume 35, Number 1, 2014Table of Contents
- Cecil Rhodes
- pp. 103-105
- To-day’s the Time
- pp. 105-106
- Beside the Road
- p. 106
- Editor’s Foreword
- pp. v-vi
- Foreword
- pp. 111-112
- Notes On Contributors
- pp. 133-135