Repository | Series | Book | Chapter
Female masks
Luigi Pirandello's plays for women
pp. 13-25
Abstract
The more difficult the struggle for life, and the more conscious we become of our own ineffectualness in the struggle, then the need for a universal stratagem of mutual deception becomes that much the greater. The feigning of strength, honesty, sympathy and prudence…of every virtue which seems to have a quality of greatness and truth about it, is merely our way of adjusting and adapting ourselves to the compromise of life…the humourist is quick to seize on these various pretences…he finds it amusing to tear off our masks.2
Publication details
Published in:
Docherty Brian (1994) Twentieth-century European drama. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 13-25
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-23073-0_2
Full citation:
Bassnett Susan (1994) „Female masks: Luigi Pirandello's plays for women“, In: B. Docherty (ed.), Twentieth-century European drama, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 13–25.