Activities per year
Abstract
2016 special issue of Neo-Victorian Studies:
This special issue will explore the ways in which modern cultures have re-worked the Victorian past through performance. As Marvin Carlson has famously suggested, theatre is a haunted practice, summoning up ghosts of past productions, styles and performances, which are often inherited from the Victorian age. Present-day live representations of the Victorians inevitably mix elements of the ‘old theatre’ – nineteenth-century auditoria, costume and
spectacle – with ‘new performance’, such as projections, recorded sound, and different configurations of performance space, actor-audience relations, performance styles and scripting or devising practices. This special issue seeks to examine such haunted interactions between old and new performance both in the theatre and beyond the stage. The guest editors invite contributions from those working across a range of arts disciplines, both scholars and practitioners, who can elaborate and analyse the ways in which the Victorians have been performed in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. While fiction and film have enjoyed scholarly attention in the field of neo-Victorian Studies drama, theatrical entertainments, music, dance, visual and audio cultures are all areas which have been relatively neglected. This special issue seeks to extend the existing neo-Victorian canon and firmly place performance as a practice heavily invested in the afterlives of Victorian culture. Topics might include but are not limited to:
Theorising neo-Victorian performance
Adapting (neo-)Victorian texts for performance
Understanding nostalgic performance, re-enactment, commemoration and
Satirising the Victorians and investigating comic performances
Neo-Victorian theatre and drama
Neo-Victorian dance and music
Neo-Victorian audio and visual cultures
Performing the (neo-)Victorian in the digital world
Probing the inceptions of neo-Victorian drama as far back as Patrick Hamilton’s Gaslight (1938) or Virginia Woolf’s Freshwater (1935), or earlier
Translating and adapting neo-Victorian performances for new cultural settings
Please address enquiries and expressions of interest to the guest editors Beth Palmer at [email protected] and Benjamin Poore at [email protected]. Completed articles and/or creative pieces, along with a short biographical note, will be due by 15 July 2015 and should be sent via email to both guest editors, with a copy to [email protected]. Please consult the NVS website (‘Submission
Guidelines’) for further guidance.
This special issue will explore the ways in which modern cultures have re-worked the Victorian past through performance. As Marvin Carlson has famously suggested, theatre is a haunted practice, summoning up ghosts of past productions, styles and performances, which are often inherited from the Victorian age. Present-day live representations of the Victorians inevitably mix elements of the ‘old theatre’ – nineteenth-century auditoria, costume and
spectacle – with ‘new performance’, such as projections, recorded sound, and different configurations of performance space, actor-audience relations, performance styles and scripting or devising practices. This special issue seeks to examine such haunted interactions between old and new performance both in the theatre and beyond the stage. The guest editors invite contributions from those working across a range of arts disciplines, both scholars and practitioners, who can elaborate and analyse the ways in which the Victorians have been performed in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. While fiction and film have enjoyed scholarly attention in the field of neo-Victorian Studies drama, theatrical entertainments, music, dance, visual and audio cultures are all areas which have been relatively neglected. This special issue seeks to extend the existing neo-Victorian canon and firmly place performance as a practice heavily invested in the afterlives of Victorian culture. Topics might include but are not limited to:
Theorising neo-Victorian performance
Adapting (neo-)Victorian texts for performance
Understanding nostalgic performance, re-enactment, commemoration and
Satirising the Victorians and investigating comic performances
Neo-Victorian theatre and drama
Neo-Victorian dance and music
Neo-Victorian audio and visual cultures
Performing the (neo-)Victorian in the digital world
Probing the inceptions of neo-Victorian drama as far back as Patrick Hamilton’s Gaslight (1938) or Virginia Woolf’s Freshwater (1935), or earlier
Translating and adapting neo-Victorian performances for new cultural settings
Please address enquiries and expressions of interest to the guest editors Beth Palmer at [email protected] and Benjamin Poore at [email protected]. Completed articles and/or creative pieces, along with a short biographical note, will be due by 15 July 2015 and should be sent via email to both guest editors, with a copy to [email protected]. Please consult the NVS website (‘Submission
Guidelines’) for further guidance.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1-11 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Neo-Victorian Studies |
Volume | 9 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 23 Dec 2016 |
Bibliographical note
© 2016, The Author(s).Activities
- 1 Journal or guest editorship
-
Neo-Victorian Studies (Journal)
Poore, B. (Guest editor)
2016Activity: Publication peer-review and editorial work › Journal or guest editorship