Research Catalog

Suzanna and the elders : an American comedy

Title
  1. Suzanna and the elders : an American comedy / by Lawrence Langner and Armina Marshall.
Published by
  1. New York : Random House, [©1940]
Author
  1. Langner, Lawrence, 1890-1962.

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Details

Additional authors
  1. Marshall, Armina
Description
  1. 168 pages; 20 cm
Summary
  1. Just as Pursuit of Happiness dealt with "bundling" amongst our forefathers, so Suzanna and the Elders deals with plural marriage and selective breeding in certain communities in America during the latter part of the 19th century. But Suzanna and the Elders is not a play about these quaint customs, solely. If you can picture an imaginary character of the type of Shaw, who has attempted to found a socialistic community in New England in which all goods are owned in common, and in which the primary evil is possessiveness, not only of property but of people, you will have a rough idea of what the play is about. The play attempts to show that the old Adam in human beings will always ultimately prevent men from being regimented, even though the dictator has only the highest motives, as was the case with our character, John Kent. Our attempt to treat this subject lightly is deliberate; not because we do not appreciate the importance of the subject, but because we feel that what we have to say can be better appreciated through this medium then by a solemn treatise on the subject, which by the way is available to anyone who will take the trouble to do the necessary research. - Jacket flap
Subject
  1. Christian communities > United States > History > Drama
  2. Oneida Community > Drama
  3. Christian communities
  4. United States
Genre/Form
  1. Fictional Work
  2. Fiction.
  3. Drama.
  4. History.
  5. Romans.
Owning institution
  1. Princeton University Library
Note
  1. "All the characters in the play are fictitious, as is also the Harmony Heights Community. There were, however, over fifty socialist communities that flourished throughout the United States during the nineteenth century. The poem, "Give, Give," and the song "The Love of God Is Better," used in the play, are derived from authentic sources."--Title page verso