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The Soldiers Playground: Echoes of War and the Fractured Man
Coles
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The Soldiers Playground: Echoes of War and the Fractured Man in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $8.09
Original price: $8.99

Coles
The Soldiers Playground: Echoes of War and the Fractured Man in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $8.09
Original price: $8.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
A postwar poetic drama set across American spaces from 1946 to 1972, The Soldiers Playground follows displaced and symbolic figures navigating war's aftermath and social fragmentation. GI Joe, a homeless veteran, moves through encampments, streets, and bureaucratic systems alongside Der Gusto, an intellectual observer; Hienz, a disoriented postwar subject; Fillmore, a former astronaut whose cosmic achievement collapses into domestic estrangement; and other shifting voices of authority, family, and abstraction.
The play unfolds in bars, offices, underpasses, and homes, where external environments merge with psychological states. Language shifts constantly between lyrical intensity, bureaucratic formulation, philosophical abstraction, and broken everyday speech, producing a destabilized theatrical world where meaning is never fixed.
Rather than a linear narrative, the work presents a series of encounters structured across acts that trace postwar adjustment, institutional management, homelessness, intellectual confrontation, technological displacement, and familial rupture. Each act functions as both scene and philosophical field, where characters embody competing ways of interpreting reality.
Themes include the long psychological aftermath of war, the failure of institutional systems to contain lived experience, the erosion of social identity, and the tension between technological progress and human dislocation. The astronaut figure extends the play's scope beyond earthbound conflict into questions of scientific ambition and existential return.
The Soldiers Playground operates as experimental theatre, using poetic dialogue and fractured syntax to challenge conventional dramatic structure. It presents language as unstable material shaped by power, memory, and survival, where speech often reveals rupture rather than resolution.
Across its shifting voices, the play constructs a portrait of modernity as fragmentation, where individuals persist within systems that continually redefine, obscure, and dissolve them.
A postwar poetic drama set across American spaces from 1946 to 1972, The Soldiers Playground follows displaced and symbolic figures navigating war's aftermath and social fragmentation. GI Joe, a homeless veteran, moves through encampments, streets, and bureaucratic systems alongside Der Gusto, an intellectual observer; Hienz, a disoriented postwar subject; Fillmore, a former astronaut whose cosmic achievement collapses into domestic estrangement; and other shifting voices of authority, family, and abstraction.
The play unfolds in bars, offices, underpasses, and homes, where external environments merge with psychological states. Language shifts constantly between lyrical intensity, bureaucratic formulation, philosophical abstraction, and broken everyday speech, producing a destabilized theatrical world where meaning is never fixed.
Rather than a linear narrative, the work presents a series of encounters structured across acts that trace postwar adjustment, institutional management, homelessness, intellectual confrontation, technological displacement, and familial rupture. Each act functions as both scene and philosophical field, where characters embody competing ways of interpreting reality.
Themes include the long psychological aftermath of war, the failure of institutional systems to contain lived experience, the erosion of social identity, and the tension between technological progress and human dislocation. The astronaut figure extends the play's scope beyond earthbound conflict into questions of scientific ambition and existential return.
The Soldiers Playground operates as experimental theatre, using poetic dialogue and fractured syntax to challenge conventional dramatic structure. It presents language as unstable material shaped by power, memory, and survival, where speech often reveals rupture rather than resolution.
Across its shifting voices, the play constructs a portrait of modernity as fragmentation, where individuals persist within systems that continually redefine, obscure, and dissolve them.


















