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Radical Realisms in Contemporary British Theatre: Rethinking Feminist Form in Plays by Women [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x138 mm, 6 bw illus
  • Sari: Methuen Drama Engage
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Aug-2025
  • Kirjastus: Methuen Drama
  • ISBN-10: 1350425818
  • ISBN-13: 9781350425811
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x138 mm, 6 bw illus
  • Sari: Methuen Drama Engage
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Aug-2025
  • Kirjastus: Methuen Drama
  • ISBN-10: 1350425818
  • ISBN-13: 9781350425811
This book offers radical new insights into the relation between realism, feminism and gender identities in contemporary theatre. It maps the theatrical forms emerging from a new wave of womens playwriting in Britain in the 2010s, unsettling the boundaries between what is conventionally considered realist and what is considered experimental.

While realism has often been characterized as a politically conservative form in feminist criticism, the author argues that contemporary feminist plays demonstrate the potential of realism, both artistically and politically, to adapt and respond to our changing world. By re-encountering realism as an experimental form through close analysis of plays and productions, the author reveals the radicalism of realism anew. Reconsidering longstanding debates in feminist theatre scholarship in the light of contemporary theatre practice in the UK, this book also offers a new, feminist formalist theoretical approach to analyzing plays.

Playwrights and practitioners studied include RashDash, Katie Mitchell, Alice Birch, Ella Hickson, Jasmine Lee-Jones, Tanika Gupta, Young Jean Lee, Lucy Kirkwood, Travis Alabanza, Yaël Farber, Split Britches and Caryl Churchill. Case studies are enriched by original interviews with practitioners, as well as performance analysis, close reading and archival research. This book explores and celebrates the vitality and inventiveness of contemporary feminist playwriting.

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This book offers radical new insights into the relation between realism, feminism and gender identities in contemporary theatre, focusing on plays by Ella Hickson, Alice Birch, RashDash and Jasmine Lee-Jones.
Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Problems of definition
Realism vs naturalism: a caveat
Realistic impulse
Realist conventions
Feeling real: relationship with an audience
The feminist critique of realism
Feminist reconsiderations of realism
Feminist theatre in the 2010s
Feminist formalism
Chapter summaries
Cannibalising the Classics: Reimagining the Real in RashDashs Three Sisters

Re-citing Chekhov: RashDashs Three Sisters
Figments of some old white guys imagination: RashDashs engagement with
Chekhov in Three Sisters
Cannibalising the canonical Chekhov
Something else now: Form, fantasy and fun
The limits of fun
Haunted Naturalism: Witnessing Character in Ophelias Zimmer
Naturalist character and the hysteric
Post-naturalist character
Watch me vanish: Witnessing character in Ophelias Zimmer
Searching for Ophelia: Naturalist performance and scenography
Subjectivity and Hamlet
A shell of a person: Plotting Character in Anatomy of a Suicide
Anatomising Anatomy
Naturalist experiment?: Traumatic repetition
Naturalist experiment?: Searching for a reason
A shell of a person: Character in performance
Spatial character: Scenography
No future: Refusing narrative closure
Political Depression?
Structural change: Multiple Realisms and Mutable realities in The Writer
Structural change
Ella Hickson and theatrical form
Metatheatrical realisms
The Writers creation and first production
Structural critique and possible worlds
Transcendent realism
An attempt at staging female experience
This strange cage
Facing reality: The politics of anti-climax
Virtual Realisms: Black Feminist Representation in seven methods of killing
kylie jenner
Background and genesis of seven methods of killing kylie jenner
Seven methods: from page to stage
Virtual realism
World building: IRL and online
Merging worlds
Black feminism and the critique of realism
Realism in drag: Representing gender in Two Man Show
Legacies of realism: Realism as patriarchal form
Performing gender, performing genre: Two Man Show
Two Man Show in performance
Realism in drag
Dancing gender: The female body in motion
Reinventing the body: Naked cross-dressing
Gendered realities
Coda: Burgerz by Travis Alabanza
Epilogue
Radical realisms now: Maryland by Lucy Kirkwood
Radical realisms now: Whose realism, which reality?
References
Primary sources
Secondary sources
Online sources: Reviews, interviews and webpages
Endnotes
Index
Hannah Greenstreet is Lecturer in Creative Writing: Stage and Screen at the University of Liverpool, UK. She completed her AHRC-funded DPhil, which was awarded the Swapna Dev Memorial Prize for the best thesis in the Faculty of English at the University of Oxford, UK, in 2021. She is also a playwright and theatre critic and served as Co-Editor of Exeunt Magazine from 2018-2022.