Suzan-Lori Parks Essays
The Past in 20th Century Drama College
Topdog/Underdog
George Santayana’ s oft-quoted aphorism—“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it”—has entered cultural ubiquity and become a cliché, paraphrased ad nauseam by politicians and philosophically-inclined college students. Still,...
Repetition & Revision in Suzan-Lori Park’s History Plays and Topdog/Underdog 12th Grade
Topdog/Underdog
In her two decades as a playwright, Suzan-Lori Parks has tackled American history from many angles; while she shuffles themes of race, family, death, and time between each of her plays, they are all linked by the common structure of what she calls...
Topdog/Underdog: A Sociological Approach to Norms and Inequality College
Topdog/Underdog
Through the writing and reception of her play Topdog/Underdog, Suzan Lori Parks sheds light on the notion that norms may either challenge the individual to surpass expectation, or they may limit one’s perceived identity to fit what is considered a...
Lincoln and Booth: Sibling Tensions in Topdog/Underdog College
Topdog/Underdog
Suzan-Lori Parks once explained that her play Topdog/Underdog “isn’t just confined to a man’s experience,” furthermore, “I think it’s about what it means to be family and, in the biggest sense, the family of man, what it means to be connected with...
Repetition & Revision in Suzan-Lori Park’s History Plays and Topdog/Underdog 12th Grade
Topdog/Underdog
In her two decades as a playwright, Suzan-Lori Parks has tackled American history from many angles; while she shuffles themes of race, family, death, and time between each of her plays, they are all linked by the common structure of what she calls...
Comparing 'Venus' and 'Never Let Me Go': Sexuality, Reproduction, and the Inhuman College
Venus
Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go and Suzan-Lori Parks's Venus explore characters who are, due to scientific engineering or physical appearance, deemed inhuman by outside society. Their othering bars them from ordinary human experiences, but...