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Absurd Drama

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A collection of plays, often classified as absurd drama, which aim to portray a world in which humanity, with its despair, fear and loneliness, is alone in a hostile and meaningless world.

Paperback

First published January 1, 1965

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About the author

Eugène Ionesco

463 books970 followers
Eugène Ionesco, born Eugen Ionescu, was a Romanian playwright and dramatist; one of the foremost playwrights of the Theatre of the Absurd. Beyond ridiculing the most banal situations, Ionesco's plays depict in a tangible way the solitude and insignificance of human existence.

Excerpted from Wikipedia.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Jeremy.
6 reviews
December 20, 2022
My attempt at an honest review:

Popularised by figures such as: Camus, Beckett and Genet, The Theatre of the Absurd rebels against the traditional form and structure of plays. It is within this rebellion that the absurdists present their own existential view of the world; abandoning all signs of objective meaning and linear structure as a means of reflecting that of the human experience. Other aspects are prominent within this literary genre, but the book’s introduction does a much better job at deconstructing these principles better than I ever could.

Most notable of the collection, and the one that first caught my attention, is The Zoo Story. The play consists of only two characters and one location, revolving around a conversation between complete strangers. It is through this bizarre exchange, that Albee displays the difficulty of communication that results in the main characters struggle to form connections.

At least that is my interpretation of the play. It could just be that Albee wanted to explore what a conversation between a mad man and an entirely ordinary person would result in.

He could’ve been more clearer with his intentions for the play.
2,047 reviews16 followers
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April 9, 2020
Well, it lives up to its title! Seriously, it’s a handy little anthology of absurd plays, and, with the exception of Albee’s “Zoo story,” texts not easily available elsewhere. Adamov’s Professor Taranne may actually be a distant ancestor of Ishiguro’s Mr. Ryder (The Unconsoled). And, as always, I find absurdism hilariously funny although I am constantly aware of some of the very serious challenges that lie at its foundations
Profile Image for Pádraic.
943 reviews
May 4, 2026
The bulk of this is taken up with Eugene Ionesco's Amedee or How to Get Rid of It, concerning two elderly people trying to deal with a corpse in their apartment that keeps growing and growing. Reminded me of his Rhinoceros in the sense that you're constantly confused as to how anybody would stage it. It also has something I've never seen before, in that it provides alternate scenes based on how big your budget is. Good fun though, a rollercoaster of escalating strange scenes.

Then we have three short plays. Arthur Adamov's Professor Taranne is a highlight, punchy and strange. Reminded me of Kafka in its sense of, the whole world is against you and your destruction is inevitable. Fernando Arrabal's The Two Executioners feels a bit strained and underbaked compared to the previous two.

The final short play is Edward Albee's The Zoo Story, which I think is just not really very absurdist at all? It's just sort of normal. Probably shouldn't be in the collection. A two-hander, it's very heavily weighted to one of the characters, where I think it'd be better if it was more even-handed. It's probably fine really, but I'm not inclined to give Albee any favours after he wrote Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, my least favourite play ever.
17 reviews
June 29, 2020
Each play is by turns terrifying and funny. I'm no expert, but it seems like a solid place to go to explore absurd drama after the famous Becketts. Ionesco gets top billing but the last play, Edward Albee's The Zoo Story, is the masterpiece here: a convulsively funny, scathing look at humanity and modernity.
Profile Image for Asser Mattar.
309 reviews44 followers
June 2, 2018
Very interesting. Published in 1965 but still valid.
3 reviews
January 8, 2026
One of the best works i have ever read. Amedee was very good. professor Taranne was an expressionist work that got me laughing for days.
Profile Image for smith.
20 reviews
April 24, 2026
really really liked the first and last ones but i wasnt as bothered about the middle ones, even if i liked bits of them
56 reviews1 follower
June 13, 2025
Picked this one up from the Charity Shop. Always feels a bit silly rating a compilation but I really appreciated the Introduction and the overall quality and thrust against a backdrop I'm very interested in.
Profile Image for Absurda..
3 reviews1 follower
September 14, 2015
I especially liked the dramas of Ionesco because they show the absurdity of an over-controled society in a fascinating kind of way.
Profile Image for Kathrin.
323 reviews
February 2, 2021
Dieses Buch war für mich zum Zeitpunkt des Lesens zu bizarr, sodass ich tatsächlich Kopfschmerzen davon bekommen habe. Ich war aber auch nicht mit dem Begriff des Absurden Theaters vertraut.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews