Representations of violence have been at the heart of some key movements in post-war British theatre. In the twenty-first century, however, these representations have evolved in a new way, characterised both by an escalation of the scale and intensity of the violence, to a point one could call apocalyptic, coupled with specifically non-realist dramaturgical and theatrical modes of production. The essay explains these phenomena as two sides of an attempt to resist neoliberal capitalism’s totalising colonisation of our experience of the real and to imagine the unimaginable end of capitalism
This article offers a speculative analysis of emerging modalities and methods of creating within con...
This thesis investigates two violent plays by the London-born playwright Martin McDonagh, The Lieut...
Drawing on Debord and Baudrillard, this thesis takes its starting point the shift from text to image...
Representations of violence have been at the heart of some key movements in post-war British theatre...
British realist drama after the Second World War tests the “rhetoric of ineffability” of the horror ...
This book investigates a range of formal strategies deployed by theatre-makers in Britain in respons...
This paper addresses the theme of fear and anxiety in contemporary drama and performance through a c...
This study contextualises Fredric Jameson's theories on the postmodern to analyse both contemporary ...
This thesis presents a close analysis of one of the ageless discourses of human life – apocalypse, o...
Violence, as the influential critic Michael Billington states, “permeated the culture in the Fifties...
This thesis is a study of the apocalyptic visions and forms that cropped up in the British cinema o...
This thesis examines the portrayal and significance of science fiction in contemporary British theat...
The title of this essay plays on words with a title of Noam Chomsky's book Media ControI and with a ...
At a time when the notion of ideological polarisation has returned to the forefront of mainstream po...
If spectacles are effects of power, designed to win wars, win elections and win customers, then how ...
This article offers a speculative analysis of emerging modalities and methods of creating within con...
This thesis investigates two violent plays by the London-born playwright Martin McDonagh, The Lieut...
Drawing on Debord and Baudrillard, this thesis takes its starting point the shift from text to image...
Representations of violence have been at the heart of some key movements in post-war British theatre...
British realist drama after the Second World War tests the “rhetoric of ineffability” of the horror ...
This book investigates a range of formal strategies deployed by theatre-makers in Britain in respons...
This paper addresses the theme of fear and anxiety in contemporary drama and performance through a c...
This study contextualises Fredric Jameson's theories on the postmodern to analyse both contemporary ...
This thesis presents a close analysis of one of the ageless discourses of human life – apocalypse, o...
Violence, as the influential critic Michael Billington states, “permeated the culture in the Fifties...
This thesis is a study of the apocalyptic visions and forms that cropped up in the British cinema o...
This thesis examines the portrayal and significance of science fiction in contemporary British theat...
The title of this essay plays on words with a title of Noam Chomsky's book Media ControI and with a ...
At a time when the notion of ideological polarisation has returned to the forefront of mainstream po...
If spectacles are effects of power, designed to win wars, win elections and win customers, then how ...
This article offers a speculative analysis of emerging modalities and methods of creating within con...
This thesis investigates two violent plays by the London-born playwright Martin McDonagh, The Lieut...
Drawing on Debord and Baudrillard, this thesis takes its starting point the shift from text to image...