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Reflecting the Audience Jim Davis

Reflecting the Audience By Jim Davis

Reflecting the Audience by Jim Davis


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Summary

This work begins to fill a large gap in theatre studies: the lack of any comprehensive study of 19th-century British theatre audiences. In an attempt to bring some order to the enormous amount of available primary material, Jim Davis and Victor Emeljanow focus on London from 1840 to 1880.

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Reflecting the Audience Summary

Reflecting the Audience: London Theatregoing, 1840-1880 by Jim Davis

This work begins to fill a large gap in theatre studies: the lack of any comprehensive study of 19th-century British theatre audiences. In an attempt to bring some order to the enormous amount of available primary material, Jim Davis and Victor Emeljanow focus on London from 1840, immediately prior to the deregulation of that city's theatres, to 1880, when the Metropolitan Board of Works assumed responsibility for their licensing. In a further attempt to manage their material, they concentrate chapter by chapter on seven representative theatres from four areas: the Surrey Theatre and the Royal Victoria to the south, the Whitechapel Pavilion and the Britannia Theatre to the east, Sadler's Wells and the Queen's (later the Prince of Wales) to the north, and Drury Lane to the west. Davis and Emeljanow thoroughly examine the composition of these theatres' audiences, their behaviour and their attendance patterns by looking at topography, social demography, police reports, playbills, autobiographies and diaries, newspaper accounts, economic and social factors as seen in census return, maps and transportation data, and the managerial policies of each theatre. In addition to assimilating an incredible amount of information efficiently, coherently and entertainingly, the authors explode the myths created by such powerful contemporary commentators as Charles Dickens to show that Victorian theatre audiences were extremely diverse and that London audiences were far more mobile socially and physically than previous accounts have implied.

Reflecting the Audience Reviews

Reflecting the Audience is pioneer scholarship because it calls for the necessity of starting over again, at Square One, in order to make an entirely new assessment of the subject.... One of the best, most interesting, and most useful studies of the Victorian theatre that I have seen in many a year. - Joseph Donohue, professor of English, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

About Jim Davis

Jim Davis is an associate professor in the School of Theatre, Film and Dance at the University of New South Wales and the editor of, most recently. The Britannia Diaries: Selections from the Diaries of Frederick C. Wilton, Victor Emeljanow, a professor in the Department of Drama at the University of Newcastle, is the author of Anton Chekhov: The Critical Heritage and Victorian Popular Dramatists.

Additional information

CIN0877457816VG
9780877457817
0877457816
Reflecting the Audience: London Theatregoing, 1840-1880 by Jim Davis
Used - Very Good
Hardback
University of Iowa Press
20011001
316
Winner of Theatre Book Prize 2001
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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