
Stock Pieces: British Repertory Theatre, 1760?1830
Series: Romantic Reconfigurations: Studies in Literature and Culture 1780-1850; 22;
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Product details:
- Publisher Liverpool University Press
- Date of Publication 6 December 2024
- ISBN 9781835537862
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages296 pages
- Size 239x163 mm
- Weight 523 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 8 Illustrations, black & white 770
Categories
Long description:
What do we gain from watching a familiar play for the nth time? This was a crucial question for Romantic-period theatre managers, who, to deliver varied programmes, relied on a repertoire of ?stock? entertainments performed in alternation with the latest plays. Repertory theatre was not new to the Romantic period, but it took on additional purchase at a time when the playhouse was not simply a site for entertainment but a government-controlled cultural institution and business, subject to sometimes extreme financial, political, and ideological pressures.
Through an innovative selection of case studies drawn from deep archival research, Stock Pieces juxtaposes canonical with otherwise forgotten entertainments; unites the period?s professional and amateur dramatic cultures; and spans British metropolitan, provincial, and imperial geographies. The picture that emerges is fresh and compelling. Stock Pieces sheds light on the mechanics of stock piece status, the Romantic afterlives of Shakespeare?s near contemporaries (whose popular appeal declined as his increased), and the work of various agents (from pantomime arrangers to enslaved performers in Jamaica) who contested the repertoire?s received aesthetic and cultural values.
It also explores the extent to which investments in the abolitionist cause were remediated by stock pieces that revived and reenacted the spectral violence of slavery and the slave trade ? for various purposes.
Stock Pieces showcases how the Romantic-period dramatic repertoire could be mobilised to signify social and political practices that operated outside the theatrical institution, crossed national borders, and dared to effect real change.
?Susan Valladares?s Stock Pieces directs attention to the British repertoire and how it was sustained and recreated amidst the shifting tides of social concern about the "nation?s political, financial, and affective investments in the slave trade". Directing attention to a continuum of dramatic performances and intertheatrical associations that stretch from The Padlock to the Afro-Jamaican Actor Boy tradition, Valladares helps us better understand how the theatre extended and reconfigured cultural memories entangled in its repertoire of stock performances.? Dana Van Kooy, Associate Professor of Transnational Literature, Literary Theory and Culture, Michigan Technological University
MoreTable of Contents:
Introduction
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The Making of a Stock Piece: The Padlock (1768)
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Stock (Re)Valuations: Beaumont and Fletcher on the Romantic-Period Stage
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A ?Pantomimetized? Repertoire: George Barnwell vs Harlequin
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Stock Pieces Re-made: The Jamaican Actor Boy Tradition
Conclusion
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