This article focuses on two mass spectacles performed in Paris stadiums in 1937, one Catholic and the other Communist, both of which sought to picture the ideal city with the working people at centre stage. By studying these productions in the light of recent research on fascist theatre and politics, and with reference to the debate on ‘modernity’ in interwar France, the article explores the French use of theatre in responding to the aesthetic, political and social challenge of representing the masses. The parallels between these two little-known productions can also be used to illuminate a wider rivalry to orchestrate the masses and to portray them as a united national community
In 1968, Jean Vilar invited the Living Theatre to the XXIIth edition of the Avignon Festival. This i...
In the autumn of 1921, protests broke out in Paris cinemas against the anti-Bolshevik documentary La...
The theatre, a very often-frequented place from the 1770s, is at the junction of several socie-ties:...
The political battles of the interwar period—in France as elsewhere—are inconceivable without the ag...
As Pierre Rosanvallon has observed, one of the challenges for a democratic régime is the imagination...
The concert as political propagande in France and the control of "performative context". (J.F. Fulch...
Despite the fact that theatre practitioners have been increasingly involved in the implementation of...
Noting the centrality of the Parisian popular in French cinema of the 1930s, this paper looks behind...
Demonstrations, meetings and fairs in Paris (June 1936-November 1938), Danielle Tartakowsky. The Pop...
This article explores the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the French Revolution in 1939 and the...
International audienceIn the 1950s in France, the public and private sectors, such as the Right Bank...
15th May 1968: the Odeon theatre in Paris is occupied by students and becomes the insurgent headquar...
La relation theatrale au tournant du siecle: Mallarme, Claudel, Artaud , explores how these authors ...
This article discusses the French interwar movement in favour of the rationalisation of work and its...
The left's triumphant appropriation of the nation in discourse and commemoration has become an impor...
In 1968, Jean Vilar invited the Living Theatre to the XXIIth edition of the Avignon Festival. This i...
In the autumn of 1921, protests broke out in Paris cinemas against the anti-Bolshevik documentary La...
The theatre, a very often-frequented place from the 1770s, is at the junction of several socie-ties:...
The political battles of the interwar period—in France as elsewhere—are inconceivable without the ag...
As Pierre Rosanvallon has observed, one of the challenges for a democratic régime is the imagination...
The concert as political propagande in France and the control of "performative context". (J.F. Fulch...
Despite the fact that theatre practitioners have been increasingly involved in the implementation of...
Noting the centrality of the Parisian popular in French cinema of the 1930s, this paper looks behind...
Demonstrations, meetings and fairs in Paris (June 1936-November 1938), Danielle Tartakowsky. The Pop...
This article explores the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the French Revolution in 1939 and the...
International audienceIn the 1950s in France, the public and private sectors, such as the Right Bank...
15th May 1968: the Odeon theatre in Paris is occupied by students and becomes the insurgent headquar...
La relation theatrale au tournant du siecle: Mallarme, Claudel, Artaud , explores how these authors ...
This article discusses the French interwar movement in favour of the rationalisation of work and its...
The left's triumphant appropriation of the nation in discourse and commemoration has become an impor...
In 1968, Jean Vilar invited the Living Theatre to the XXIIth edition of the Avignon Festival. This i...
In the autumn of 1921, protests broke out in Paris cinemas against the anti-Bolshevik documentary La...
The theatre, a very often-frequented place from the 1770s, is at the junction of several socie-ties:...