Independent Publishers Group Logo

Sign up today...
for featured titles, special offers, bestsellers, and more, in your inbox!

Subscribe to receive special offers, monthly books suggestions, seasonal selections, and more!

Close
Two Plays: Couvade and A Pleasant Career
Two Plays: Couvade and A Pleasant Career

Two Plays: Couvade and A Pleasant Career

Caribbean Modern Classics

PERFORMING ARTS

152 Pages, 5.5 x 8.25

Formats: Trade Paper

Trade Paper, $19.95 (US $19.95) (CA $21.95)

Publication Date: June 2014

ISBN 9781845231897

Rights: US & CA

Peepal Tree Press Ltd. (Jun 2014)

Price: $19.95
 
 

Overview

Both of the plays in this volume focus closely and dramatically on the pressures on the creative imagination of the writer and artist in the Caribbean. Couvade, which was first performed in Guyana in 1972 and published in 1974, references the Amerindian ritual where the man takes to his bed and “suffers” some pains equivalent to the pangs of childbirth while his female partner is in actual labor. On one realistic but symbolic level, Lionel’s wife Pat is in the latest stages of her pregnancy, but in her view her artist husband has become obsessed with the Amerindian-themed painting he is working on, to the detriment of his concern for her. At another ritual level in the drama, apparent only to Lionel in his dreams, a shaman enacts a collective ritual of offering and celebration of the gods. A Pleasant Career is based on the biography of the pioneering and conflicted Guyanese novelist, Edgar Mittelholzer. His career begins with the ludicrous ambition in the 1930s to be an internationally known writer in a society that has no conception of the artist or writer as other than something that comes from overseas. The play explores Mittelholzer’s early negotiations of the race and class hierarchies of color in British Guyana, his own position as the “swarthy” boy in a predominantly white family, and his resolute determination to beat down the doors of the London publishing world.

Reviews

"In Couvade Michael Gilkes takes us on a journey beyond the historical stasis of linear reality. The dream of Couvade, physically embodied in the newborn child, offers hope of a new consciousness."  —John Agard, former poet-in-residence, National Maritime Museum



"Michael Gilkes’ Couvade . . . invokes as Amerindian birthing ritual to articulate the play’s complex vision of a unified post independent Guyana."  —T. M. J. Indra Mohan, Indian Review of World Literature in English

Author Biography

Michael Gilkes has recently been a Quillian Visiting Professor at Randolph-Macon Women’s College. Prior to that, he taught at the University of Guyana, the University of the West Indies in Barbados, and Sir Arthur Lewis Community College in St. Lucia. He is a distinguished Caribbean critic, dramatist, lecturer, and more recently a filmmaker. He is the author of Joanstown, winner of the Guyana Prize for best book of poetry; The Last of the Redmen, winner of the Guyana Prize for drama; The Literate Imagination; A Pleasant Career, winner of the Guyana Prize for drama; The West Indian Novel, and Wilson Harris and the Caribbean Novel.