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Crude Thinking: John Fuegi and Recent Brecht Criticism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 January 2009
Abstract
ALL LEFT-WING cultural practitioners and theoreticians have, at one time or another, been accused of Stalinism. Indeed, in many cases, this charge has to be taken on board, particularly after the collapse of existing state socialism. During the first few decades of this century most cultural activities, schools, and theories in many ways defined themselves within the context of existing or imaginary and utopian marxisms.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995
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Notes and References
1. This is a view that Martin Esslin has been voicing for years in all his works on Brecht. For Esslin, reassessing Brecht mainly involves ‘rescuing (him) from those rather obtuse orthodoxies that proclaimed the excellence of this theatre as a palpable proof that Stalinisttype communism worked’, as he stated in his review of Thomson, Peter and Sacks, Glendyr, The Cambridge Companion to Brecht, in Plays International, 07 1994Google Scholar.
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11. Ibid.
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