The Censorship of British Drama 1900-1968 Volume 1: 1900-1932

Author:   Steve Nicholson
Publisher:   University of Exeter
ISBN:  

9780859896382


Pages:   360
Publication Date:   03 February 2003
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Censorship of British Drama 1900-1968 Volume 1: 1900-1932


Overview

This is the first part of a two volume analysis of British theatre censorship from 1900 until 1968, based on previously undocumented material in the Lord Chamberlain's Correspondence archives. It covers the period before 1932, when theatre was widely seen as a crucial medium with the power to shape the future of society, determining what people believed and how they behaved. Where previous interpretations, based on more limited evidence and topics, have often constructed the Lord Chamberlain's Office either as an annoying but amusing irrelevance, or as dictatorial in its unchanging certainties, this study throws completely new light on the day-to-day functioning of the system and the principles, policies and detailed practice of theatre censorship. It uncovers the differing views and the disputes which occurred among and between the Lord Chamberlain and his Readers and Advisers, and discusses the extensive pressures exerted on him by bodies such as the Public Morality Council, the Church, the monarch, government departments, foreign embassies, newspapers, powerful individuals and those claiming to represent national or international opinion.

Full Product Details

Author:   Steve Nicholson
Publisher:   University of Exeter
Imprint:   University of Exeter
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.740kg
ISBN:  

9780859896382


ISBN 10:   0859896382
Pages:   360
Publication Date:   03 February 2003
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

'...offers a highly readable, intelligent, and good-humoured account of the complex intersection of historical, political, social, and cultural forces that influenced censorship during this period. The writing is lively, authoritative, and full of wonderful detail acquired during Nicholson's meticulous research into the Lord Chamberlain's theatre and correspondence archives...' 'The scope of Nicholson's research is admirable for many reasons, not least for the months he spent reading every file in the Lord Chamberlain's Collection. But it is more than this. By refusing to limit his study to the great and the good, Nicholson reveals much about the overall character of British theatrical life during this period, about the themes and issues that preoccupied the censors, and the political implications of how a powerful elite exerted both overt and covert pressure on such a vital component of cultural practice.' '...this chapter continues to provide the same incisive commentary, detailed examples, and shocking revelations that characterize the rest of the book.' 'Throughout the book, Nicholson probes the implications of decisions to endorse, cut, rewrite, restrict, and censor lines, characters, speeches, and themes and establishes how these decisions interrelate with the wider political climate. The result is an excellent book, which both illuminates a vital period of theatre history and reveals a great deal about the internal mechanisms, shifting agendas, intricate negotiations, compromises and revisions overseen by the Lord Chamberlain's office. It leaves a vivid impression of the culture and prevalent political discourses that governed theatre censorship during this time and provides a powerful indictment of a pompous and insidious agent of repression that attempted to preserve the veneer of a polite, unquestioning society.' '...should be welcomed as a long overdue account of the role and function of British theatre censorship during the twentieth century.' Modern Drama. Vol. XLVIII, No 1, Spring 05 'Nicholson is very readable. He tells a good story, both chronologically and in the many accounts of particular wrangles, campaigns, negotiations, subtleties, paradoxes and outrages. He makes good maps - of contesting discourses, of logistical problems for the Censorship and of the lived relationships between the functions of Lord Chamberlain and his comptroller at Saint James's Palace and (at the workface) the reader or examiner of plays. With respect to the last in particular, he uses correspondence to give palpable life to human agencies within institutional structures.' '...this is also both a work of reference - it efficiently points us to particular records - and a fine work of synthesis and summary - Nicholson has done the legwork for a community of scholars.' Theatre Research International, 32.2 'a major new contribution to twentieth-century British theatre history.' 'The chief pleasure of Nicholson's book is his generous quoting from the interior communications of the office, affording a glimpse of the individual personalities behind the bureaucracy.' Theatre Journal, December 2005, Vol.57, No.4


Nicholson is very readable. He tells a good story, both chronologically and in the many accounts of particular wrangles, campaigns, negotiations, subtleties, paradoxes and outrages. . . . He uses correspondence to give palpable life to human agencies within institutional structures. * Theatre Research International * . . should be welcomed as a long overdue account of the role and function of British theatre censorship during the twentieth century. * Modern Drama *


`...offers a highly readable, intelligent, and good-humoured account of the complex intersection of historical, political, social, and cultural forces that influenced censorship during this period. The writing is lively, authoritative, and full of wonderful detail acquired during Nicholson's meticulous research into the Lord Chamberlain's theatre and correspondence archives...' `The scope of Nicholson's research is admirable for many reasons, not least for the months he spent reading every file in the Lord Chamberlain's Collection. But it is more than this. By refusing to limit his study to the great and the good, Nicholson reveals much about the overall character of British theatrical life during this period, about the themes and issues that preoccupied the censors, and the political implications of how a powerful elite exerted both overt and covert pressure on such a vital component of cultural practice.' `...this chapter continues to provide the same incisive commentary, detailed examples, and shocking revelations that characterize the rest of the book.' `Throughout the book, Nicholson probes the implications of decisions to endorse, cut, rewrite, restrict, and censor lines, characters, speeches, and themes and establishes how these decisions interrelate with the wider political climate. The result is an excellent book, which both illuminates a vital period of theatre history and reveals a great deal about the internal mechanisms, shifting agendas, intricate negotiations, compromises and revisions overseen by the Lord Chamberlain's office. It leaves a vivid impression of the culture and prevalent political discourses that governed theatre censorship during this time and provides a powerful indictment of a pompous and insidious agent of repression that attempted to preserve the veneer of a polite, unquestioning society.' `...should be welcomed as a long overdue account of the role and function of British theatre censorship during the twentieth century.' (Modern Drama. Vol. XLVIII, No 1, Spring 05) `Nicholson is very readable. He tells a good story, both chronologically and in the many accounts of particular wrangles, campaigns, negotiations, subtleties, paradoxes and outrages. He makes good maps - of contesting discourses, of logistical problems for the Censorship and of the lived relationships between the functions of Lord Chamberlain and his comptroller at Saint James's Palace and (at the workface) the reader or examiner of plays. With respect to the last in particular, he uses correspondence to give palpable life to human agencies within institutional structures.' `...this is also both a work of reference - it efficiently points us to particular records - and a fine work of synthesis and summary - Nicholson has done the legwork for a community of scholars.' (Theatre Research International, 32.2) `a major new contribution to twentieth-century British theatre history.' `The chief pleasure of Nicholson's book is his generous quoting from the interior communications of the office, affording a glimpse of the individual personalities behind the bureaucracy.' (Theatre Journal, December 2005, Vol.57, No.4)


Author Information

Steve Nicholson is Emeritus Professor at the University of Sheffield. He is a series editor for Exeter Performance Studies and the author of British Theatre and the Red Peril: The Portrayal of Communism, 1917-1945, also published by UEP.

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