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Entertainment, Propaganda, Education: Regional Theatre in Germany and Britain Between 1918 and 1945 [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x15 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jun-2008
  • Kirjastus: University of Hertfordshire Press
  • ISBN-10: 1902806751
  • ISBN-13: 9781902806754
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x15 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jun-2008
  • Kirjastus: University of Hertfordshire Press
  • ISBN-10: 1902806751
  • ISBN-13: 9781902806754
Teised raamatud teemal:
Dr Heinrich takes Yorkshire and Westphalia as his two representative regions, detailing the history of theatre in York, Hull, Sheffield, Bradford and Leeds as well as in Munster, Dortmund, Hagen, Bielefeld and Bochum. Dr Heinrich moves from the histories and repertoires of individual theatres to examine their social function, with interesting results. The perception of theatre in Britain changed dramatically during the War years: suddenly the British government became interested in influencing the arts and introduced state subsidies on an unprecedented scale. At the heart of the new policy was not only the belief that theatre could play an important role in the war effort (as both entertainment and education) but also a concept of municipal theatre provision which was, in effect, similar to that which already prevailed in Germany.In Germany, despite claims by the Nazis that theatre programmes must reflect National-Socialist ideas, regional repertoires remained largely unchanged from the days of the Weimar Republic, with comedies, farces and operettas designed to appeal to public taste. In successfully challenging dominant views regarding the alleged fundamental differences between British and German theatre, Dr Heinrich's findings mean that, to an extent, a key chapter in European theatre history must be rewritten.
List of Figures
xi
Acknowledgements xiv
Introduction 1(24)
History of theatre in Yorkshire
25(52)
Early history
26(2)
Regional theatre provision in late Victorian and Edwardian Britain
28(3)
Comparative perspectives
30(1)
Yorkshire's theatres during and after the First World War
31(12)
Entertainment Tax and competition from the cinema
31(1)
Amateur movement, resident companies and repertory theatres
32(5)
Civic but not municipal theatres
37(2)
Yorkshire's theatres in the late 1930s
39(3)
Comparative aspects
42(1)
War: Closure, reopening and new perspectives
43(11)
ENSA and CEMA
44(2)
Propaganda
46(2)
Boost for regional theatre
48(2)
Touring companies
50(1)
Air raids
50(1)
War effort
51(3)
Concluding remarks
54(23)
History of Theatre in Westphalia
77(61)
Early history
78(3)
Regional theatres in the eighteenth century: Munster's Comodienhaus
78(2)
Comparative perspectives
80(1)
The beginning of municipal theatre provision
81(4)
Munster's Romberger Hof and Lortzing-Theater
81(2)
The other Westphalian theatres
83(2)
Theatre in the Weimar Republic
85(5)
Munster's Stadtische Buhnen
86(1)
The other Westphalian theatres
87(3)
The Nazi take-over
90(6)
Danger of closure, renovation and propaganda in Munster
92(2)
The take-over at Bielefeld
94(1)
The take-over at Dortmund
94(1)
The take-over at Bochum
95(1)
The take-over at Hagen
95(1)
Comparative perspectives II
96(1)
The first `National Season'
97(4)
Liebscher in Munster
97(2)
Bergmann in Dortmund
99(1)
Geer in Bielefeld
100(1)
Bender in Hagen
101(1)
Schmitt in Bochum
101(1)
`Normalisation'
101(6)
Willi Hanke in Munster
102(2)
Georg Hartmann and Peter Hoenselaars in Dortmund
104(1)
Alfred Kruchen in Bielefeld
105(1)
Bochum
106(1)
Hagen
107(1)
Comparative perspectives III
107(1)
Theatre at war
108(4)
Munster
109(1)
The other Westphalian theatres
110(2)
Concluding remarks
112(26)
Theatre Repertoires in Yorkshire
138(42)
Features of Yorkshire's repertoires during the 1920s and 1930s
140(4)
A typical season
140(1)
Foreign repertoire
141(3)
Comparative aspects
144(1)
Programme notes
145(1)
Repertory system
145(1)
Changes after 1939
146(10)
Music
146(3)
Ballet
149(1)
Classical drama
150(2)
Contemporary comedies
152(1)
Contemporary (non-commercial) drama
153(2)
Comparative aspects
155(1)
Wartime repertoires in perspective
156(24)
Theatre and state
157(1)
Censorship
158(1)
Subsidies, intervention and control
159(1)
`Our great National Poet'
160(20)
Theatre Repertoires in Westphalia
180(52)
The Weimar years
181(4)
The dramatic repertoire
182(1)
The musical repertoire
183(1)
Context
184(1)
Changes in the late 1920s
184(1)
The Third Reich
185(21)
Take-over
185(1)
The first `National' Season
186(3)
`Normalisation'
189(1)
Changed approaches to propaganda
190(2)
Stressing continuities
192(1)
Theatre history and the classics
192(2)
Demands on modern classics
194(2)
Problems, inconsistencies and the foreign repertoire
196(3)
The musical repertoire
199(3)
Entertainment
202(1)
Context
203(1)
War repertoires
204(2)
Concluding remarks
206(26)
Conclusion 232(14)
Bibliography 246(21)
Index 267
Dr Anselm Heinrich is Lecturer in Theatre Studies at the University of Glasgow. He has published on different aspects of British and German history.