Martin Mcdonagh's the pillowman , or the justification of literature

Philosophy and Literature 35 (1):168-181 (2011)
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Abstract

Since 1996, with the premiere of his play, The Beauty Queen of Leenane, Martin McDonagh has emerged as one of the most powerful young voices in the English-speaking theater world. The Pillowman is his most philosophical work. It is a meta-theatrical exercise that obliquely addresses the question of whether theater (and, by extension, literature) can be justified in anything that it says. Or, instead, are some things out of bounds, perhaps sometimes warranting regulation?

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Noel Carroll
CUNY Graduate Center

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