Disrupting the quotidian: hoaxes, fires, and non-theatrical performance in nineteenth-century London
Abstract:
In this essay Jim Davis considers two examples of everyday non-theatrical performance in nineteenth-century London: hoaxes and fires. Whereas an element of hoaxing can be perceived in some contemporary performance events and in the practice of ‘invisible theatre’, usually with some ethical intention, hoaxes in early nineteenth-century London were perpetrated for the sake of creating disruption and making dupes of unsuspecting witnesses. A more visible form of disruption and spectacle was created by fires and firefighting itself, which, at least after Captain Eyre Massie Shaw took control of the London fire brigade, became a form of public performance. Although hoaxes were common in pantomime and farce, and conflagrations often strengthened the impact of sensation melodramas, the disruptive effects of extra-theatrical hoaxes and fires on everyday life created a less reassuring and more dystopian sense …
Año de publicación:
2013
Keywords:
Fuente:

Tipo de documento:
Other
Estado:
Acceso abierto
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Teatro
- Artes escénicas
- Estudios culturales
Áreas temáticas:
- Actuaciones públicas
- Retórica y colecciones literarias
- Islas Británicas