Radical Stages

Alternative History in Modern British Drama
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ISBN-13:
9780313278884
Veröffentl:
1991
Einband:
HC gerader Rücken kaschiert
Erscheinungsdatum:
30.10.1991
Seiten:
210
Autor:
D. Keith Peacock
Gewicht:
501 g
Format:
235x157x17 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This unique volume examines the evolution of British historical drama from the birth of modern British drama with John Osborne's Look Back in Anger in 1956 to the establishment of the right-wing government of Margaret Thatcher during the early 1980s. The book illustrates how the ruling group within a society establishes a cultural hegemony by which it perpetuates its values as society's norms. Radical Stages demonstrates how historical drama within the period increasingly was employed as a weapon in an assault upon this cultural hegemony.First defining historical drama, Peacock differentiates the historical drama after 1956 from its predecessors as representing a shift from concern with individual psychology to an emphasis upon the socioeconomic context in which personality is formed. The first stage of this development, to 1968, was marked by a populist concern with ordinary people and by an absence of specific political propaganda. Following the defeat of student revolutionary movements in 1968, the gradual change in left-wing political inclination from anarchism to Marxism was treated in historical settings by such dramatists as Howard Brenton, Trevor Griffiths, Edward Bond, and David Edgar. Radical Stages analyzes these movements as reflected in drama and also considers the place of women in the revolutionary movements of the 1960s and in the British theatre and historical drama of the period. The final chapter speculates on the future of British historical drama in the wake of the fall of both the Thatcher government and communist governments in Eastern Europe.
The study analyzes how the revolutionary and social movements of the period, including the women's movement, are reflected in its historical drama and speculates on the future of British historical drama.
IntroductionHistorical DramaPresenting the PastPrivate and PublicWesker's Social RealismThe DocumentaryJohn Arden and the EpicFreedom and Good OrderA Usable HistoryChronicles and DisillusionmentEdward Bond's Historical AllegoriesThe Woman's PlaceFact Plus Fiction Equals "Faction"AfterwordBibiliographyIndex

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