Dieses E-Book erscheint am 31.03.2026 und kann erst ab diesem Datum gekauft werden.
The Lamp
In Conversation with St. Luke
von Ron Starbuck
Beschreibung
The Lamp is a lament in verse, written for theater in the round and presented in three movements. Standing in conversation with Luke 11:34-36 and the tradition of modern poetic drama, it explores how a city sees - and what happens when fear begins to shape perception.
In an unnamed American city, labor rises before dawn. Kitchens open. Concrete sets. Towers catch morning light. Yet beneath the brightness, a line is already forming - quiet, procedural, almost reasonable - between those who are seen and those who are merely useful. What begins as policy hardens into posture; what is spoken as order becomes action. A single irreversible moment alters the moral temperature of the city.
But The Lamp does not rest in catastrophe. It follows the event as it leaves the street and enters language, where words such as "necessary," "law," and "order" begin to soften consequence and normalize what has occurred. Fear becomes vocabulary. Justification becomes calm. The question shifts from what happened to what we are willing to accept.
Structured in three arcs - visibility, violence, and normalization - the play resists polemic and refuses sentimentality. Its central tragedy is not driven by villainy, but by reflex, misjudgment, and a system trained to expect threat. The deeper cruelty lies not only in the moment of action, but in the architecture that prepares it and the language that absorbs it.
Performed in the round, the audience becomes part of the civic circle. There is no front. No safe distance. Watching becomes participation. The play concludes without applause cues, ending instead in sustained silence - inviting reflection rather than release.
This literary edition presents the full poetic text as a reading experience, including the director's notes and an alternate staging appendix. A separate stage production edition, formatted for rehearsal and performance, will be released independently.
Produktdetails
| ISBN | 9781955194532 |
| Verlag | Saint Julian Press, Inc. |
| Erscheinungsdatum | 31.03.2026 |
| Sprache | Englisch |