The thesis studies the female voice in the local culture in the post-devolution dramatic adaptations of the Scottish Makar Liz Lochhead. It acknowledges the dramatist's idiosyncratic approach of fusing poetry and drama in order to question the new internationalist national model in Scotland resembling the main features of anti-colonial nationalisms post 1990s. Central to the thesis is the question of local female voice in the current national debate and whether and to what extent it problematizes the relation between feminism and nationalism in the new civic model introduced after devolution as an internationalist in Scotland. Lochhead's idiosyncratic voice of a poet and dramatist is interpreted as a non-feminist and non-nationalist with a ...
International audienceA provisional re-mapping of Scotland’s post-devolution literary culture, these...
International audienceL’histoire de l’Écosse est jalonnée par l’importance de nombreuses femmes, de ...
Cats on a Cold Tin Roof: Female Identity and Language in Plays by Five Contemporary Scottish Women P...
The thesis studies the female voice in the local culture in the post-devolution dramatic adaptations...
This dissertation argues that Liz Lochhead challenges and reconsiders the patriarchal epistemologica...
[Abstract] It has been argued that Scottish culture has experienced a “Second Renaissance” in the la...
Identity within Scotland and Scottish theatre has been intertwined for centuries. However, identity ...
Liz Lochhead (b. 1947) is one of Scotland’s most decorated contemporary writers, however, an extensi...
Abstract. From the very first description of the two kingdoms on an island in Lochhead’s play, a str...
From the late 1960s until the present day, a significant number of women playwrights have emerged in...
This thesis is an examination of Liz Lochhead's three published plays: Blood and Ice (1982), Dracula...
Explores theatrical issues and theoretical approaches to translating, adapting and staging Chekhov\u...
The topic of my thesis is a certain form of identity, that is, national identity, in a special conte...
This article is concerned with the double binds of a gender-based and cultural- geographical margina...
Explores theatrical issues and theoretical approaches to translating, adapting and staging Chekhov's...
International audienceA provisional re-mapping of Scotland’s post-devolution literary culture, these...
International audienceL’histoire de l’Écosse est jalonnée par l’importance de nombreuses femmes, de ...
Cats on a Cold Tin Roof: Female Identity and Language in Plays by Five Contemporary Scottish Women P...
The thesis studies the female voice in the local culture in the post-devolution dramatic adaptations...
This dissertation argues that Liz Lochhead challenges and reconsiders the patriarchal epistemologica...
[Abstract] It has been argued that Scottish culture has experienced a “Second Renaissance” in the la...
Identity within Scotland and Scottish theatre has been intertwined for centuries. However, identity ...
Liz Lochhead (b. 1947) is one of Scotland’s most decorated contemporary writers, however, an extensi...
Abstract. From the very first description of the two kingdoms on an island in Lochhead’s play, a str...
From the late 1960s until the present day, a significant number of women playwrights have emerged in...
This thesis is an examination of Liz Lochhead's three published plays: Blood and Ice (1982), Dracula...
Explores theatrical issues and theoretical approaches to translating, adapting and staging Chekhov\u...
The topic of my thesis is a certain form of identity, that is, national identity, in a special conte...
This article is concerned with the double binds of a gender-based and cultural- geographical margina...
Explores theatrical issues and theoretical approaches to translating, adapting and staging Chekhov's...
International audienceA provisional re-mapping of Scotland’s post-devolution literary culture, these...
International audienceL’histoire de l’Écosse est jalonnée par l’importance de nombreuses femmes, de ...
Cats on a Cold Tin Roof: Female Identity and Language in Plays by Five Contemporary Scottish Women P...