Description
Poisoned cigars, seductive apparitions, minds and empires in the last of their decline and the most notorious kiss in dramatic history - decadent plays challenged the moral as much as the dramatic imagination of their own day, and continue to probe horizons of taste and the possibilities of stagecraft.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many writers reacted to urban modernity by embracing decadent themes and styles, and dramatists were no exception. Decadence offered these writers a framework for exploring nonconformist identities and beliefs that challenged behavioural norms as much as the desirability of modern progress. Decadent plays were at once behind the times in their celebration of antiquity, and forward-thinking in their staging of themes that have become all the more timely in the 21st century, including queerness, unconventional eroticism, and critiques of empire and industrial progress. Equally, the diversity of decadent drama cannot be pigeon-holed; many of these plays still have the capacity to offend worldviews, and invite us to interrogate present-day conventions and propriety.
About the Author
Adam Alston is Senior Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary Theatre at Goldsmiths, University of London. He is the author of Staging Decadence: Theatre, Performance, and the Ends of Capitalism (2023) and Beyond Immersive Theatre: Aesthetics, Politics and Productive Participation (2016), and co-editor of Theatre in the Dark: Shadow, Gloom and Blackout in Contemporary Theatre (with Martin Welton, 2017) and a special issue of Volupté Interdisciplinary Journal of Decadence Studies on 'Decadence and Performance' (with Alexandra Bickley Trott, 2021).
Jane Desmarais is Professor of English and Director of the Decadence Research Centre in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Goldsmiths, University of London. She is the author of Monsters under Glass: A Cultural History of Hothouse Flowers, 1850 to the Present (2018) and Editor-in-Chief of Volupté International Journal of Decadence Studies. She has written numerous essays and has co-edited several works on the theme of decadence, including Decadence: An Annotated Anthology (with Chris Baldick, 2012), Arthur Symons: Selected Early Poems (with Chris Baldick, 2017), Decadence and the Senses (with Alice Condé, 2017), Decadence and Literature (with David Weir, 2019) and The Oxford Handbook of Decadence (with David Weir, 2021).Wishlist
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