Abstract
Presents a detailed discussion and appreciation of the Slab Boys tetralogy, a sequence of four plays by the Scottish playwright and painter John Byrne, beginning with The Slab Boys (1978), focused on a group of apprentices in the color-mixing room of a Paisley carpet-factory in the 1950s, and then tracing the divergence of their lives through three later plays, The Loveliest Night of the Year (1979, later titled Cuttin' A Rug), Still Life (1982), and Nova Scotia (2008); examines Byrne's characterization, "excoriatingly destructive wit," and "rambunctiously demotic language"; analyzes the tetralogy's continuing major themes of the relation between art and life, high art and popular culture; and concludes that these are plays of "striking intellectual breadth" and "superb verbal inventiveness," combining "international with distinctively Scottish themes," and "producing a fusion of realism and fantasy probably unmatched in Scotland since the heyday of Hugh MacDiarmid."
Recommended Citation
Donaldson, William
(2016)
"John Byrne's The Slab Boys: Technicolored Hell-hole in a Town Called Malice,"
Studies in Scottish Literature:
Vol. 41:
Iss.
1, 221–236.
Available at:
https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/ssl/vol41/iss1/18
Included in
Dramatic Literature, Criticism and Theory Commons, Literature in English, British Isles Commons, Theatre History Commons