Storytelling in Apocalyptic Times: Anne Washburn’s Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play

Author:

Snyder Laura1

Affiliation:

1. Stevenson University , Baltimore United States of America

Abstract

Abstract This article analyzes Anne Washburn’s wildly popular, and often controversial, Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play (2012) by focusing on the principal retellings that shape Mr. Burns and delineating how Washburn’s adaptations produce the thematic content of the play. Washburn deftly interweaves a variety of high and low culture source material within the plot. Pandemic and apocalyptic tropes provide the ecofictional narrative base to adaptations of Stephen King’s The Stand (1978), Euripides’s Orestes, Martin Scorsese’s Cape Fear (1991), and a variety of episodes of The Simpsons (1989–). Through these retellings, Mr. Burns metatheatrically chronicles how stories shape listeners and their cultures. When the stories told simply pander to the materialism, greed, and commodification that permeate contemporary global capitalist culture, then society proliferates those solipsistic values. Washburn ultimately argues that, in what may seem like apocalyptic times, storytelling as embodied in the theater arts must instead advocate humanitarian collectivist values.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Literature and Literary Theory,Visual Arts and Performing Arts

Reference19 articles.

1. Barrera, Camille. “‘For We Are American’: Postmodern Pastiche and National Identity in Anne Washburn’s Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play.” Journal of Contemporary Drama in English 6.1 (2018): 131–145. Print.

2. Brantley, Ben. “Stand Up Survivors; Homer Is with You.” The New York Times, 15 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 July 2020. .

3. Brown, Scott. “Apocalypse? D’oh!” Vulture, 17 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 July 2020. .

4. Cape Fear. Dir. Martin Scorsese. Perf. Nick Nolte, Robert De Niro, Jessica Lange, and Juliette Lewis. Universal Pictures, 1991. Film.

5. “Cape Feare.” The Simpsons. Fox, 7 Oct. 1993. Television.

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