Think of a garden and other plays
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About This Book
Unlike much of Kneubuhl's earlier work, these plays are touchingly personal in their exploration of alienation and cultural identity. Think of a Garden, the first play of the trilogy and the last written before the playwright's death in 1992, has been called the most Samoan of Kneubuhl's plays - a candid look at the writer's bicultural upbringing that artfully weaves together family memory, history, and mysticism.
In Mele Kanikau: A Pageant, Kneubuhl once again uses the supernatural to comment on the fragile state of a divided culture - that of Hawaiians. In A Play: A Play, the most structurally complex of the plays and Kneubuhl's most successful attempt at comedy, what begins as a Cowardesque farce ends in an unsettling portrayal of a man struggling to come to terms with his Hawaiian heritage.
In Mele Kanikau: A Pageant, Kneubuhl once again uses the supernatural to comment on the fragile state of a divided culture - that of Hawaiians. In A Play: A Play, the most structurally complex of the plays and Kneubuhl's most successful attempt at comedy, what begins as a Cowardesque farce ends in an unsettling portrayal of a man struggling to come to terms with his Hawaiian heritage.
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