Glorious Causes: The Grand Theatre of Political Change, 1789 to 1833Oxford University Press, 2001 - Всего страниц: 202 'Social and cultural historians interested in theatre or politics in the age of reform will find much of value in this innovative and readable study' -Robert Poole, Social History Society BulletinGlorious Causes explores the British nation as a stage for reform in the late Georgian era. Liberation movements for social and political change, for slaves, for factory and rural workers, for women, and for the vote, drew their energies crucially from theatre as well as political agitation, together creating the drama of reform. |
Содержание
The Grand Theatre of Reform | 18 |
Slavery Removing the Cloak from the Truth | 41 |
Dark Satanic Mills Transforming the Face of England | 76 |
Distressed Tenants and Rural Landscapes 93 256 | 93 |
Women Players and the Protection Racket | 113 |
The Grand Theatre of Political Change 1789 to 1833 | 137 |
Epilogue | 175 |
Bibliography | 188 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
abolition movement aesthetic African anti-slavery argues argument attempt autobiography Britain British Buckstone BULWER Bulwer-Lytton Burke Cambridge University Library century character comedy Committee on Dramatic context critical culture debate Donkin Douglas Jerrold drama Dramatic Literature DUNCOMBE E. P. Thompson Edward Bulwer-Lytton emancipation England English Working Class Equiano France French George Colman Ibid Inchbald Inkle and Yarico interest issue Jack John Bull language late Georgian later license London Corresponding Society Lord Chamberlain Lord Chamberlain's office Luke the Labourer male Marie Antoinette Mary Robinson Mary Wollstonecraft melodrama memoir Moncrieff moral actor Oastler Olaudah Equiano painting parliamentary particularly performance period play's playwrights popular question racial radical relation relationship Rent Day represent representation Richard Oastler riots RUSSELL Select Committee sensibility significant slavery social stage theatre and politics theatre audiences theatre managers theatrical Thomas Hardy tion University Press whilst William woman women playwrights writing Zelinda