This article explores the Jewish working-class poet John Rodker’s writing for and about the stage as an overlooked, alternative theorisation of modernist theatre and its artistic and institutional function. It retraces the origins of his 1914 theatre manifesto, published in the magazine The Egoist, to his earlier theatre criticism to show that Rodker initially took an interest in the stage, above all, as a tool for the political engagement and artistic education of the masses. I discuss three theatre critiques, published in The Freewoman and Poetry and Drama between 1912–1913, in which Rodker considers three different types of contemporary theatre with a view to their effectiveness in engaging popular audiences in contemporary social and ae...
<p>Engaging and Evading the Bard is about British theatrical modernism and its ambivalent relationsh...
This thesis examines the relationship between the English Jewish writer and publisher John Rodker an...
This dissertation discusses the Yiddish theatre in the context of its importance to the evolution of...
This thesis examines the career of the modernist writer John Rodker (1894-1955) in the context of t...
This thesis argues that one of the tasks of literary hiStory is to identify and challenge the proces...
This thesis studies the writing and painting of several members of a generation that grew up in the ...
1914-1956: as political governing systems clashed, economic crises devastated nations and the percei...
The Belarus Free Theatre was founded in 2005 by Belarusian playwright and journalist Nikolai Khalezi...
As part of its contribution to the 1951 Festival of Britain, the Arts Council ran what can be seen i...
This book brings together original research in theatre and the visual arts, around the common object...
Bibliography: pages 617-630.This dissertation proposes to examine the work of John McGrath and the 7...
Heiner Muller directed Shakespeare's Hamlet together with his own The Hamletmachine as Hamlet/Machin...
This article considers the British reception of Ibsen around the turn of the century, replacing mode...
Modernists and the Theatre is the first study to examine how theories of modernism intersect with th...
The essays collected in this issue of Skenè deal with Jewish theatre at large – that is, theatre wri...
<p>Engaging and Evading the Bard is about British theatrical modernism and its ambivalent relationsh...
This thesis examines the relationship between the English Jewish writer and publisher John Rodker an...
This dissertation discusses the Yiddish theatre in the context of its importance to the evolution of...
This thesis examines the career of the modernist writer John Rodker (1894-1955) in the context of t...
This thesis argues that one of the tasks of literary hiStory is to identify and challenge the proces...
This thesis studies the writing and painting of several members of a generation that grew up in the ...
1914-1956: as political governing systems clashed, economic crises devastated nations and the percei...
The Belarus Free Theatre was founded in 2005 by Belarusian playwright and journalist Nikolai Khalezi...
As part of its contribution to the 1951 Festival of Britain, the Arts Council ran what can be seen i...
This book brings together original research in theatre and the visual arts, around the common object...
Bibliography: pages 617-630.This dissertation proposes to examine the work of John McGrath and the 7...
Heiner Muller directed Shakespeare's Hamlet together with his own The Hamletmachine as Hamlet/Machin...
This article considers the British reception of Ibsen around the turn of the century, replacing mode...
Modernists and the Theatre is the first study to examine how theories of modernism intersect with th...
The essays collected in this issue of Skenè deal with Jewish theatre at large – that is, theatre wri...
<p>Engaging and Evading the Bard is about British theatrical modernism and its ambivalent relationsh...
This thesis examines the relationship between the English Jewish writer and publisher John Rodker an...
This dissertation discusses the Yiddish theatre in the context of its importance to the evolution of...