
The Oxford Handbook of Scottish Theatre
by Randall Stevenson, Bruce Young, Alison Lumsden, Gerard Carruthers, Linda Mackenney, Ian Brown, Sarah Carpenter, Paul Maloney, Pamela M. King, Olga Taxidou, Michael Billington, Donald Smith, Anne Varty, David Goldie, Brian Hoyle, Michelle Macleod, Allan Radcliffe
- Tytuł oryginalny
- Atomic Habits
- Język oryginału
- Angielski
- Liczba stron
- 320
- Wydawnictwo
- Avery
O tej książce
The Oxford Handbook of Scottish Theatre tells the story of drama and performing in Scotland from the earliest traces of folk plays, performances, and royal ceremonies in the medieval period right up to the challenges of the present post-pandemic moment in the professional theatre. It brings together distinguished scholars, theatre professionals, critics and reviewers to share their experiences of studying and in some cases producing the most significant landmarks of Scottish stage history, discussing pivotal plays and productions (Lyndsay's Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis, Ramsay's The Gentle Shepherd, Home's Douglas, adaptations of Rob Roy and the 'National Drama', Lamont Stewart's Men Should Weep, Lochhead's Mary Queen of Scots Got Her Head Cut Off), writers (including Joanna Baillie, J.M. Barrie, James Bridie, John McGrath, and the writers of the radical post-Millenium generation), and companies (including The Scottish National Players, The Glasgow Citizens, 7:84, Wildcat, Communicado, and the National Theatre of Scotland) alongside incisive accounts of the cultural contexts (from the Reformation to the Thatcher government and beyond) that produced and challenged them.Separate chapters explore Scots language and Gaelic drama; the popular theatrical forms of the travelling 'geggies', music hall, variety, and pantomime; theatre for young audiences; radio and television drama; the significant roles of the director and the theatre critic and reviewer in shaping Scottish theatre; and the Scottish stage's long history of dialogue with performance traditions in England, Ireland, and Continental Europe. Contributors describe the often-fierce struggles that led to the opening up of the Scottish stage to working-class voices and audiences, women writers and performers, writers of colour, LGBTQ+ voices, innovators in dramatic form, and the long process leading towards the foundation of the NTS, and its early work alongside other key developments in the twenty-first century.
Więcej od Randall Stevenson
Ethics, Literature, and Theory: An Introductory Reader
Joyce Carol Oates, Orson Scott Card, John Updike, Toni Morrison, Charles Johnson, Bernard Malamud, James Phelan, A.B. Yehoshua, John Gardner, Jay Parini, Richard A. Posner, Stephen L. Tanner, Barbara A. Heavilin, Wayne C. Booth, Nina Rosenstand, Stephen K. George, Anthony Cunningham, Richard E. Hart, Bruce Young, Jack Harrell, Mary R. Reichardt, Marshall Gregory, John J. Han, Dudley Barlow, Georgia A. Newman, David Parker, John H. Wallace, Marianne Jennings
Cencrastus No. 10: Autumn 1982
Cairns Craig, Colin McArthur, Randall Stevenson, Sheila G. Hearn, Fraser Sutherland, Christopher Harvie, Bill Findlay, Tom Hubbard, Lindsay Paterson, Kenneth White, Anthony Carty, Stephen Maxwell, Forsyth Hardy, Patrick Eyres, James McCulloch, Michael Hechter, Aonghas MacNeacail, Allan Cunningham, William Storrar, R.J. Morris, Geoffrey Carnall, Robert Ross, T.S. Law, Isobel Lindsay
Cencrastus No. 11: New Year 1983
Cairns Craig, Colin McArthur, Randall Stevenson, Alexander Trocchi, Edwin Morgan, John Herdman, Raymond J. Ross, Anthony Carty, Hugh Cheape, Brian Holton, Geddes Thomson, John Haggarty, Glen Murray, James Wilkie, Andy Scott
Cencrastus No. 19: Winter 1984
Régis Debray, Cairns Craig, Randall Stevenson, Christopher Harvie, Robin Fulton, Bob Tait, David McCrone, Robin Hamilton, James F. McMillan, John Cooney, Alastair J. Durie, John Caughie, Elspeth King, Gael Turnbull, Jessie Kesson, Gerrie Fellows, Janet Caird, Linda Mackenney, Raymond J. Ross, Craig Beveridge, Pádraig Ó Macháin