Interculturalism and Resistance in the London Theater, 1660-1800: Identity, Performance, Empire

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Bucknell University Press, 2000 - History - 217 pages
By strategic consideration of political and intellectual alliances that the theater inspired and stifled, and through discussions of a wide cross-section of performance practices from the time of Dryden to that of Inchbald, Choudhury demonstrates the power of performativity in a culture in ascendancy. She argues that nationalism, as both active movement and contemplative ideology, cannot be separated from the themes of expansionism that propel the many incentives, principles, and sites of performance.
 

Contents

Theater Culture and Conflict Modes of Recuperation Spheres of Resistance
3
The Italian Incursions and English Opera
23
Palimpsests and the Periphery
49
Colonial Fetishism Imperial Play
75
Female Orientalism
97
Borders Borderlessness and Beyond
120
Epilogue Challenging the Plaudits of the Mimic Stage
149
Notes
164
Selected Bibliography
195
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About the author (2000)

Mita Choudhury teaches in the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts at the Georgia Institute of Technology. She has also taught at Emory University, New York University, St. Lawrence University, Pennsylvania State University, and at Miranda House College in the University of Delhi.

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