882 resultados para Drama, Theatre


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Howard Barker is a writer who has made several notable excursions into what he calls â˜the charnel houseâ¦of European drama.â David Ian Rabey has observed that a compelling property of these classical works lies in what he calls â˜the incompleteness of [their] prescriptionsâ, and Barkerâs Women Beware Women (1986), Seven Lears (1990) and Gertrude: The Cry (2002), are in turn based around the gaps and interstices found in Thomas Middletonâs Women Beware Women (c1627), Shakespeareâs King Lear (c1604) and Hamlet (c1601) respectively. This extends from representing the missing queen from King Lear, who Barker observes, â˜is barely quoted even in the depths of rage or pityâ, to his new ending for Middletonâs Jacobean tragedy and the erotic revivification of Hamletâs mother. This paper will argue that each modern reappropriation accentuates a hidden but powerful feature in these Elizabethan and Jacobean plays â namely their clash between obsessive desire, sexual transgression and death against the imposed restitution of a prescribed morality. This contradiction acts as the basis for Barkerâs own explorations of eroticism, death and tragedy. The paper will also discuss Barkerâs project for these â˜antique textsâ, one that goes beyond what he derisively calls â˜relevanceâ, but attempts instead to recover â˜smothered geniusâ, whereby the transgressive is â˜concealed within structures that lend an artificial elegance.â Together with Barkerâs own rediscovery of tragedy, the paper will assert that these rewritings of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama expose their hidden, yet unsettling and provocative ideologies concerning the relationship between political corruption / justice through the power of sexuality (notably through the allure and danger of the mature woman), and an erotics of death that produces tragedy for the contemporary age.

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Aleks Sierz in his important survey of mid 1990s drama has identified the plays of Sarah Kane as exemplars of what he terms â˜In-Yer Faceâ theatre. Sierz argues that Kane and her contemporaries such as Mark Ravenhill and Judy Upton represent a break with the ideological concerns of the previous generation of playwrights such as Doug Lucie and Stephen Lowe, whose work was shaped through recognizable political concerns, often in direct opposition to Thatcherism. In contrast Sarah Kane and her generation have frequently been seen as literary embodiments of â˜Thatcherâs Childrenâ, whereby following the fall of the Berlin Wall and the inertia of the Major years, their drama eschews a recognizable political position, and seems more preoccupied with the plight of individuals cut adrift from society. In the case of Sarah Kane her frequently quoted statement, â˜I have no responsibility as a woman writer because I donât believe thereâs such a thingâ, has compounded this perception. Moreover, its dogmatism also echoes the infamous comments attributed to Mrs Thatcher regarding the role of the individual to society. However, this article seeks to reassess Kaneâs position as a woman writer and will argue that her drama is positioned somewhere between the female playwrights who emerged after 1979 such as Sarah Daniels, Timberlake Wertenbaker and Clare McIntyre, whose drama was distinguished by overtly feminist concerns, and its subsequent breakdown, best exemplified by the brief cultural moment associated with the newly elected Blair government known as â˜Cool Britanniaâ. Drawing on a variety of sources, including Kaneâs unpublished monologues, written while she was a student just after Mrs Thatcher left office, this paper will argue that far from being an exponent of post-feminism, Kaneâs drama frequently revisits and is influenced by the generation of dramatists whose work was forged out the sharp ideological positions that characterized the 1980s and a direct consequence of Thatcherism.