The Last Days of Mankind: A Tragedy in Five Acts

$26.00
by Karl Kraus

Shop Now
NOW THE SUBJECT OF A MAJOR STAGE PRODUCTION FEATURING THE TIGER LILLIES! WORLD PREMIERE AT EDINBURGH'S LEITH THEATRE ON 11-11-2018 Intended ‘for a theatre on Mars’, with a cast of nearly five hundred and running to over two hundred scenes, Karl Kraus’s apocalyptic tragedy 'The Last Days of Mankind' is the longest play ever written. It is also a biting satirical commentary on the outbreak and subsequent horrors of World War I. Karl Kraus (1874-1936) ranks as one of the great satirists of 20th-century literature. In 1899 he established his own journal, 'Die Fackel' (The Torch), to ‘drain the marsh of empty phrase-making.’ His wide-ranging oeuvre comprises essays, short stories, poetry and aphorisms, and culminated in the five-act play presented here. First published in 1920, 'The Last Days' employs a collage of modernist techniques to evoke a despairing and darkly comical vision of the Great War from the perspective of Kraus’ hometown, Vienna. At its centre Kraus places a cabal of war mongering press barons and self-serving hacks, whose strategies of mass manipulation he holds responsible for the very atrocities they report on in dispatches, editorials and feuilletons. With this translation of the play in its entirety, Patrick Healy completes the work begun in 2014 when he published the first ever English-language version of the Prologue and Act I in the Kraus anthology 'In These Great Times: Selected Writings'. The present edition includes an introduction and a glossary of names and relevant terms. Press Review for The Last Days of Mankind ‘It is wonderful to at last have the Viennese satirist’s entire modernist masterwork available, complete, and with a scholarly introduction… Healy conveys the communal bewilderment and rage in a dazzling vernacular as a chorus of voices reacts to the outbreak of the Great War and the hell it created … It sizzles and flares.’ – Eileen Battersby ‘The Last Days of Mankind is not just a huge document, it is an important interpretation of a world at war and the beginnings of globalisation, which would intimately undermine the nation states it gave birth to.’ – Gerard Howlin, Irish Examiner, 28 December 2016

Customer Reviews

No ratings. Be the first to rate

 customer ratings


How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.

Review This Product

Share your thoughts with other customers