Acknowledgements Introduction
Anne Etienne and Chris Megson
PART 1: FORMS AND SOURCES OF CENSORSHIP Intervention 1 -
Vicki Ann Cremona and Marco Galea, 'Capturing Space: Crashing Down the Gates of the Maltese Utopia
Chapter
1.
Milena Dragicevic Sesic and Aleksandra Jovicevic, 'Voices from Semi-peripheries: Pressure, Self-censorship, and Micropolitics of Resistance in the Western Balkans'
Chapter
2.
Alex Trustrum-Thomas, 'The Emperor's New Clothes: Ideology and Censorship in Contemporary Russian Theatre'
Chapter
3.
Anne Etienne and Lisa Fitzpatrick, 'Risings and Cancelling: Implicit Censorship on a Free Irish Stage'
PART 2: GHOSTS OF THE PAST Intervention 2 -
Andrea Tompa, 'Censorship in Hungary: Comedy, Silence, and Subversion'
Chapter
4.
Denis Poniz, 'Nothing New on the Eastern Front: Censorship in Contemporary Slovenia'
Chapter
5.
Agnieszka Jakimiak, 'Un-Divine Comedy. Remains and Self-Censorship as Work-In- Progress in Poland'
Chapter
6.
Andrew Holden, 'Opera Censorship in Europe - Production, Circulation, and Reception in a Transnational Market' Intervention 3 -
Lonneke van Heugten, 'The Tenacity of Tradition: Performativity in the Dutch Black Pete Controversy'
PART 3: STAGING TABOOS Intervention 4 -
Roaa Ali, 'Racialized Censorship in the Age of ""Culture Wars""'
Chapter
7.
Chris Megson, 'Images of Protest: Religion, Theatre, and Censorship'
Chapter
8.
Olga Kolokytha, Yulia Belinskaya, and Matina Magkou, 'Religion and Politics: Silencing Greek Theatre in the Twenty-First Century'
Chapter
9.
Duncan Wheeler, 'Booing and Banning: Freedom and Prohibition in Spain's ""National Fiesta""' Intervention 5 -
Hannah Probst, 'Play on the Periphery: Irrational Queerness as Resistance to Censorship in Gestalta's Shibari Performance Art'
Anne Etienne lectures in Modern and Contemporary Drama in the School of English, University College Cork. Her publications explore theatre censorship, Arnold Wesker and contemporary Irish theatre. She co-edits the series Palgrave Studies in Cultural Censorship.
Chris Megson is Reader in Drama and Theatre at Royal Holloway, University of London. His publications focus on post-war and contemporary British playwriting, theatre censorship, and global theatres of the real. He co-edits the series Playwriting and the Contemporary: Critical Collaborations (LUP).