The Cambridge History of British Theatre
3 Volume Hardback Set
Part of The Cambridge History of British Theatre
- Editors:
- Jane Milling, University of Exeter
- Peter Thomson, University of Exeter
- Joseph Donohue, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
- Baz Kershaw, University of Bristol
- Date Published: December 2004
- availability: Temporarily unavailable - available from TBC
- format: Multiple copy pack
- isbn: 9780521827904
Multiple copy pack
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This three-volume set explores the rich and complex histories of English, Scottish and Welsh theatres from early Britain to the present. Volume 1 begins in Roman Britain and ends with Charles II's restoration to the throne imminent. Volume 2 begins in 1660 with the restoration of King Charles II to the throne and the re-establishment of the professional theatre, interdicted since 1642, and follows the far-reaching development of the form over two centuries and more to 1895. Volume 3 explores the rich and complex histories of English, Scottish and Welsh theatres in the 'long' twentieth century since 1895. Original essays written by leading British and American historians and critics investigate the major aspects of theatrical performance, combining an interest in the written drama with an understanding of the material conditions of the evolving professional theatre that the drama helped to sustain.
Read more- Three volumes looking at the turbulent public life of performance in Britain
- Essays written by leading British and American scholars
- Each volume features 'case studies' of famous plays in performance and is fully illustrated
Reviews & endorsements
'… a set that will stand as the most valuable resource on British theater for some time to come. Essential.' Choice
See more reviews'… exceptional … destined to prove one of the most erudite, and yet accessible, resources for theatre scholars and students as well as serious theatre practitioners … must be hailed as perhaps the most carefully compiled and comprehensively covered history ever attempted. … I know of no library that has any other theatre history (focusing exclusively on British theatre) on its shelves to challenge this great new work's pole position in the theatre reference stakes … All in all, a great work.' Amateur Stage
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×Product details
- Date Published: December 2004
- format: Multiple copy pack
- isbn: 9780521827904
- length: 1744 pages
- dimensions: 310 x 245 x 162 mm
- weight: 3.83kg
- contains: 109 b/w illus.
- availability: Temporarily unavailable - available from TBC
Table of Contents
Volume 1. Origins to 1660: General preface
Chronology
Part I. Pre-Elizabethan Theatre:
1. From Roman to Renaissance in drama and theatre
2. Faith, pastime, performance and drama in Scotland to 1603
3. The Bible as play in Reformation England
4. Drama in 1553: continuity and change
Part II. Elizabethan Theatre:
5. The development of a professional theatre, 1540–1660
6. Drama outside London after 1540
7. 'An example of courtesy and liberality': great households and performance
8. The birth of an industry
9. Theatre and controversy, 1572–1603
10. The condition of theatre in England in 1599
11. Ben Jonson's Every Man in His Humour: a case study
12. London professional playhouses and performances
Part III. Jacobean and Caroline Theatre:
13. Working playwrights, 1580–1642
14. Theatre and controversy, 1603–42
15. The Stuart masque and its makers
16. Clowns, fools and knaves: stages in the evolution of acting
17. Thomas Middleton's A Game at Chess: a case study
18. The condition of the theatres in 1642
19. Theatre and Commonwealth
Works cited
Index. Volume 2. 1660–1895: Preface and acknowledgements
Timeline:
1660 to 1894
Part I. 1660–1800:
1. Introduction: the theatre from 1660 to 1800
2. Theatres and repertory
3. Theatre and the female presence
4. Theatre, politics and morality
5. Theatre companies and regulation
6. The Beggar's Opera: a case study
7. Garrick at Drury Lane, 1747–76
8. Theatre outside London, 1660–1775
9. 1776: a critical year in perspective
10. The theatrical revolution, 1776–1843
Part II. 1800 to 1895:
11. Introduction: the theatre from 1800 to 1895
12. Presence, personality and physicality: actors and their repertoires, 1776–1895
13. Theatres, their architecture and their audiences
14. Stage design from Loutherbourg to Poel
15. Theatre and mid-Victorian society, 1851–1870
16. Gendering Victorian theatre
17. Popular entertainment, 1776–1895
18. The Bells: a case study
a 'bare-ribbed skeleton' in a chest
19. The new drama and the old theatre
20. 1895: a critical year in perspective
Bibliography of works cited
Index. Volume 3. Since 1895: Acknowledgements
Chronology
List of illustrations
Part I. 1895–1946:
1. British theatre, 1895–1946: art, entertainment, audiences – an introduction
2. The London stage, 1895–1918
3. Provincial stages, 1900–1934: touring and early repertory theatre
4. Popular theatre, 1896–1940
5. Case study: Cicely Hamilton's Diana of Dobson's, 1908
6. A critical year in perspective:
1926
7. The London stage, 1918–45
8. Social commitment and aesthetic innovation, 1895–1946
PART II. Scottish and Welsh Theatres, 1895–2002:
9. Towards national identities: theatre in Scotland
10. Case study: Ena Lamont Stewart's Men Should Weep, 1947
11. Towards national identities: Welsh theatres
12. Case study: refashioning a myth, performances of the tale of Blodeuwedd
Part III. 1940–2002:
13. British theatre, 1940–2002: an introduction
14. The establishment of mainstream theatre, 1946–79
15. Alternative theatres, 1946–2000
16. Developments in the profession of theatre, 1946–2000
17. Case study: Theatre Workshop's Oh What a Lovely War, 1963
18. 1979 and after: a view
19. British theatre and commerce, 1979–2000
20. New theatre for new times: decentralisation, innovation and pluralism, 1975–2000
21. Theatre in Scotland in the 1990s and beyond
22. Theatre in Wales in the 1990s and beyond
23. English theatre in the 1990s and beyond
Bibliography
Index.
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