Social and Political Theatre in 21st-Century Britain: Staging Crisis: Methuen Drama Engage
Autor Vicky Angelaki Prof. Enoch Brater, Mark Taylor-Battyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 feb 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781474213165
ISBN-10: 1474213162
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Seria Methuen Drama Engage
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1474213162
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Seria Methuen Drama Engage
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
It draws on interviews with many key practitioners, including playwrights, directors and artistic directors within its sustained critical and theoretical argument relating to spectatorship and topical issues that affect everyone
Notă biografică
Vicky Angelaki is Associate Professor of Theatre at the University of Reading, UK. She has published extensively on modern and contemporary British and European theatre and her research focuses on internationalism, translation, adaptation, philosophy, spectatorial perception, and the politics of experimental performance. Major publications include The Plays of Martin Crimp: Making Theatre Strange (2012) and Contemporary British Theatre: Breaking New Ground (2013).
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsIntroduction: Theatres of Crisis 1. Too Much Information: Caryl Churchill and Post-millennial Angst 2. Occupy the Audience: Mike Bartlett and the Collectivity of Resistance 3. Defined by Debt: Dennis Kelly and Capitalist Dependencies 4. Austerity VS Prosperity: Duncan Macmillan, Nick Payne and the Economy of Emotion 5. Utopia to Dystopia: Martin Crimp and the Illusion of Insularity 6. The Darkness within: Simon Stephens and the Depth of Melancholy 7. Residues of Violence: debbie tucker green and Desolate Urban Landscapes 8. Trials of Happiness: Lucy Prebble and the Human Experiment Conclusion Epilogue Index
Recenzii
In so far as theatre holds up the mirror to our society, this detailed examination of plays from writers concerned with the current crises of individual alienation ... makes the book a timely exercise.
The very premise of the book - that a new theatrical discourse has developed, one that interrogates acts of spectatorship within an ethical frame - is its key strength: exciting, novel and intellectually robust. The topicality of the book is refreshing and very welcome. The commitment to an international perspective, rooted very much in the ambition to pursue and define how shared pre-occupations are articulated through live theatre, is also a positive aspect of this proposal. The book will be the first time many of the plays addressed will feature within a monograph of this substance. Incorporating interviews as a means of consolidating that original survey and analysis, this book promises to be a key text for years to come.
Angelaki (Univ. of Reading, UK) contends in her epilogue that "playwrighting is not only alive as a genre of urgent socially and politically motivated theatre, but also in fighting form." This is an apt summation of her book, which argues that "theatres of crisis" are alive and well in 21st-century Britain. In penetrating examinations of selected works of Caryl Churchill, Mike Bartlett, Dennis Kelly, Duncan Macmillan, Nick Payne, Martin Crimp, Simon Stephens, debbie tucker green, and Lucy Prebble, Angelaki builds a potent case for these playwrights' theatrically powerful response to matters of critical local and global concern, including the fallout from the politics of neoliberalism, community relations, ethics, environment, mass consumption, and healthcare. She believes their plays invite spectators to active engagement with crisis, and she structures her own argument to provoke a similar response, allowing readers to consider lengthy excerpts from the plays as well as a panoply of critical and scholarly responses and relevant texts from a range of disciplines. Angelaki also investigates how particular production choices enhance the political urgency of the plays, and she explores how unorthodox staging helps audiences shed passivity and become agents for change. Good bibliography and index. Summing Up: Recommended.
The very premise of the book - that a new theatrical discourse has developed, one that interrogates acts of spectatorship within an ethical frame - is its key strength: exciting, novel and intellectually robust. The topicality of the book is refreshing and very welcome. The commitment to an international perspective, rooted very much in the ambition to pursue and define how shared pre-occupations are articulated through live theatre, is also a positive aspect of this proposal. The book will be the first time many of the plays addressed will feature within a monograph of this substance. Incorporating interviews as a means of consolidating that original survey and analysis, this book promises to be a key text for years to come.
Angelaki (Univ. of Reading, UK) contends in her epilogue that "playwrighting is not only alive as a genre of urgent socially and politically motivated theatre, but also in fighting form." This is an apt summation of her book, which argues that "theatres of crisis" are alive and well in 21st-century Britain. In penetrating examinations of selected works of Caryl Churchill, Mike Bartlett, Dennis Kelly, Duncan Macmillan, Nick Payne, Martin Crimp, Simon Stephens, debbie tucker green, and Lucy Prebble, Angelaki builds a potent case for these playwrights' theatrically powerful response to matters of critical local and global concern, including the fallout from the politics of neoliberalism, community relations, ethics, environment, mass consumption, and healthcare. She believes their plays invite spectators to active engagement with crisis, and she structures her own argument to provoke a similar response, allowing readers to consider lengthy excerpts from the plays as well as a panoply of critical and scholarly responses and relevant texts from a range of disciplines. Angelaki also investigates how particular production choices enhance the political urgency of the plays, and she explores how unorthodox staging helps audiences shed passivity and become agents for change. Good bibliography and index. Summing Up: Recommended.