| The mythological, folkloric, and religious beliefs of Western culture have
resulted in a long and ongoing history of esoteric themes in theatre from the
Middle Ages to the present in Spain and the America. Now Robert Lima, a
noted
comparatist, brings to bear on this material his wide knowledge of the world
of
the occult. Lima defines the terms "occult" and "occultism" broadly to embrace
the many ways in which humans have sought to fathom a secret knowledge
held to
be accessible only through such supernatural agencies as alchemy,
angelology,
asceticism, astrology, demonolatry, divination, ecstasy, magic, necromancy,
possession, Santeria, séances, voudoun, and witchcraft. The dramatic works
covered range from medieval materializations of Hell to the Golden Age plays
of
Lope de vega, Tirso de Molina, and Calderón de la Barca, to modern stage
works
by Valle-Inclán, García Lorca, Casona, Miras, and a number of significant
Afro-Brazilian and Caribbean dramatists. The concluding comprehensive
bibliography of the drama of the occult is invaluable.
Robert Lima is professor of Spanish and comparative
literature and fellow of the Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies at
Pennsylvania State University. He has published extensively on European and
Hispanic drama, and is the author of Stages
of Evil: Occultism in Western Theater and Drama
|