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A Study Guide for David Rabe's "Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel"
A Study Guide for David Rabe's "Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel"
A Study Guide for David Rabe's "Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel"
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A Study Guide for David Rabe's "Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel"

By Gale and Cengage

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A Study Guide for David Rabe's "Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel," excerpted from Gale's acclaimed Drama For Students. This concise study guide includes plot summary; character analysis; author biography; study questions; historical context; suggestions for further reading; and much more. For any literature project, trust Drama For Students for all of your research needs.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 27, 2016
ISBN9781535819176
A Study Guide for David Rabe's "Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel"

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    A Study Guide for David Rabe's "Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel" - Gale

    2

    The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel

    David Rabe

    1971

    Introduction

    David Rabe’s The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel was the first American play of stature to deal with the experience of the Vietnam War. At least one historian of the Vietnam era, Philip Beidler writing in American Literature and the Experience of Vietnam, found that Rabe made the most important contributions to the dramatic literature of Vietnam during the period 1970-75. After being rejected by numerous regional and experimental theaters, the play was first produced professionally in 1971 at the Public Theatre by Joseph Papp’s New York Shakespeare Festival, one of the country’s most prestigious production organizations. Rabe’s professional debut was a success: Pavlo Hummel enjoyed a run of 363 performances and received predominantly enthusiastic critical response. Clive Barnes of the New York Times acclaimed Rabe as a new and authentic voice of our theatre. For this play, Rabe received the Village Voice’s Obie Award for distinguished playwriting, and a Drama Desk Award for most promising playwright.

    From trying to keep a journal during his military service in Vietnam, Rabe found that his experience there defied description, exceeding the capabilities of language as mere symbol, as he wrote in his introduction to Two Plays: The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel and Sticks and Bones. Unwilling to bring his full sensibility to bear upon all elements of the experience, Rabe skimmed over things and hoped they would skim over me. In Rabe’s depiction, the Vietnam experience is a sur-real carnival of death, reflected in Pavlo’s extremely confused state of mind, and in the mood of expressionism throughout the play. The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel is not strictly an anti-war play; its author believes that war is inevitably a part of what he calls the eternal human pageant. Instead, Rabe examines the process of basic training as an American rite of passage, using his metaphor to illustrate the coercive power of the institution. Rabe himself called military basic training a metaphor for the essential training by which society reshapes all individuals.

    Author Biography

    David Rabe was born March 10, 1940, in Dubuque, Iowa, the son of a high school teacher who later became a meatpacker, and a department store worker. He was educated at Catholic institutions for whom he also played football. He earned his B.A. from Loras College in 1962. Rabe went to Villanova University in Philadelphia for a master’s degree in theatre but was drafted before he completed the program of study. From 1965 to 1967 he served in the U.S. Army, with eleven months of duty in Vietnam. Rabe—like his character Pavlo Hummel—was assigned to hospital duty, and though he did not engage in combat, he witnessed fighting at close range. His experience in

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