Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019

This thesis explores contemporary manifestations of dystopian theatre. Through a detailed analysis of ten carefully selected plays and performances premiered in the UK from the year 2000 onwards, it aims to identify the key traits, mechanisms, and functions specific to the genre. Despite the prolife...

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Main Author: De Simoni, Laura
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65722/
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author De Simoni, Laura
author_facet De Simoni, Laura
author_sort De Simoni, Laura
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis explores contemporary manifestations of dystopian theatre. Through a detailed analysis of ten carefully selected plays and performances premiered in the UK from the year 2000 onwards, it aims to identify the key traits, mechanisms, and functions specific to the genre. Despite the proliferation of theatre with dystopian thematic concerns in the UK since the turn of the twenty-first century, with a few notable exceptions the critical scholarship on dystopia tends to concentrate on other forms, especially the novel, at the expense of the theatrical medium. My thesis aims to redress this imbalance. By bringing together concepts from Utopian Studies and critical approaches to drama and performance studies, I develop a specialist, innovative framework for the analysis of dystopian theatre. Each chapter attends to a central feature of dystopia – its narrative structure, its estrangement, and its function of critique – in order to investigate how theatre interprets, transforms, and develops the themes and conventions of the genre. Through the analysis of a range of recent dystopian plays and performances, this project explores the diverse ways in which dystopias in the theatre communicate, affectively and cognitively, with their audiences. This study contends that the current understanding of dystopia can be enriched by the productive encounter with theatre’s unique qualities, particularly its materiality, multiple signifying system, and relations to live audiences. The key findings of this dissertation are that dystopian theatre conveys its critique in distinctively theatrical ways, by combining linguistic techniques, scenographic features, and visual, spatial, aural and kinetic signs with the affective elements of performance. To illustrate my argument, my first analysis chapter examines the scripts of Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman, Dawn King’s Foxfinder, Sam Sneider’s Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, and Sam Holcroft’s Edgar & Annabel. The second considers the scripts and production arrangements of Lucy Kirkwood’s Tinderbox, Stef Smith’s Girl in the Machine and Alistair McDowall’s Pomona. The final chapter focuses on the performances of Killer by Philip Ridley, Golem by 1927, and The Wedding by Gecko.
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spelling nottingham-657222025-02-28T15:12:38Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65722/ Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019 De Simoni, Laura This thesis explores contemporary manifestations of dystopian theatre. Through a detailed analysis of ten carefully selected plays and performances premiered in the UK from the year 2000 onwards, it aims to identify the key traits, mechanisms, and functions specific to the genre. Despite the proliferation of theatre with dystopian thematic concerns in the UK since the turn of the twenty-first century, with a few notable exceptions the critical scholarship on dystopia tends to concentrate on other forms, especially the novel, at the expense of the theatrical medium. My thesis aims to redress this imbalance. By bringing together concepts from Utopian Studies and critical approaches to drama and performance studies, I develop a specialist, innovative framework for the analysis of dystopian theatre. Each chapter attends to a central feature of dystopia – its narrative structure, its estrangement, and its function of critique – in order to investigate how theatre interprets, transforms, and develops the themes and conventions of the genre. Through the analysis of a range of recent dystopian plays and performances, this project explores the diverse ways in which dystopias in the theatre communicate, affectively and cognitively, with their audiences. This study contends that the current understanding of dystopia can be enriched by the productive encounter with theatre’s unique qualities, particularly its materiality, multiple signifying system, and relations to live audiences. The key findings of this dissertation are that dystopian theatre conveys its critique in distinctively theatrical ways, by combining linguistic techniques, scenographic features, and visual, spatial, aural and kinetic signs with the affective elements of performance. To illustrate my argument, my first analysis chapter examines the scripts of Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman, Dawn King’s Foxfinder, Sam Sneider’s Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, and Sam Holcroft’s Edgar & Annabel. The second considers the scripts and production arrangements of Lucy Kirkwood’s Tinderbox, Stef Smith’s Girl in the Machine and Alistair McDowall’s Pomona. The final chapter focuses on the performances of Killer by Philip Ridley, Golem by 1927, and The Wedding by Gecko. 2021-08-04 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65722/1/De%20Simoni%20-%20PhD%20Thesis%202021-%20with%20corrections.pdf De Simoni, Laura (2021) Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. theatre performance drama dystopia contemporary UK drama utopia estrangement affect language dystopian theatre
spellingShingle theatre
performance
drama
dystopia
contemporary
UK
drama
utopia
estrangement
affect
language
dystopian theatre
De Simoni, Laura
Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019
title Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019
title_full Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019
title_fullStr Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019
title_full_unstemmed Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019
title_short Staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the UK 2000-2019
title_sort staging the dark times: contemporary dystopian theatre in the uk 2000-2019
topic theatre
performance
drama
dystopia
contemporary
UK
drama
utopia
estrangement
affect
language
dystopian theatre
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65722/