We’ll put our heads together and choose a text to “play,” beginning next week. There are no hard and fast rules on what makes for a good text, but in my view here are some general criteria:
- size matters: there’s a lot of work (well, play) in order to read the text and understand it, plus do enough research on your character in order to play them competently. So novella-length is good. Also, a modest number of main characters is much better than a Tolstoyan dramatis personae.
- rich history helps: the play really cooks when you can activate the penumbra around a text rather than just enact what happens within its pages. So texts that have interesting reception histories or performance histories or controversies around them are a good fit.
- lively voices: since you’re basically ventriloquizing characters, authors, readers, etc., one hopes for fun, lively characters to inhabit.
A few suggestions:
- At the risk of tedium, my earlier suggestion of Sinclair Lewis’s novel imagining a dystopian fascist USA, It Can’t Happen Here, would be great. I dimly remember that it was turned into a play that was widely performed in the 1930s and would be interesting to delve into.
- How about Jonathan Franzens’ The Corrections, given that it sparked the notorious Oprah Affair and occasioned all kinds of discussions about literature, media, and commerce?
- A novel with a coterie of famous readers around it might be cool, like Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein?
I’m sure you’ll have your own ideas, and we can have 2 or 3 games going on different texts if we like.
Finally, a few examples:
- These 720ers played Nella Larsen’s 1920s Harlem Renaissance novel of passing, Quicksand.
- And these Hunter undergrads played a cycle of Charles Chesnutt’s revisionary plantation fiction stories, The Conjure Tales.
- Finally, these 720ers played Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye


Update: we’ve chosen two texts…
Fox’s Desperate Characters (1970)
Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio (1919)
I’ll create the sites and get us up and going this week. Please acquire and start reading/reading about, so you’re ready to think about characters, etc.