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“Thoughts that Flash like Lightning”: Thomas Holcroft, Radical Theater, and the Production of Meaning in 1790s London
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2014
Extract
During the 1790s, political speech in London's public spaces and commercial sites of leisure came under intense governmental surveillance. Fearing revolutionary infection from across the channel in France, the Pitt ministry sent spies into popular organizations such as the London Corresponding Society and turned more attention to other sites as well, including coffeehouses, taverns, debating-club rooms, and the street. Recently, historians too have explored the ways in which radicals manipulated the ludic vocabularies of urban sociability to critique the regime, protest persecution, and argue for reform. In this article I address a site that figured prominently as a place for radical speech in the 1790s: the Theatre Royal at Covent Garden. Although it was a site whose content was strictly regulated by the state through the office of the Examiner of Plays, the royal theater was, like other eighteenth-century theaters, a place where performances multiplied: viewers watched the play, but in the well-lit and noisy pit, boxes, and galleries, they watched other viewers intently. All were engaged in a complex process of performance, reception, and counterperformance. Indeed, as scholars have shown, theater audiences in late Georgian London were highly skilled at appropriating a theatrical grammar by which to demand their perceived rights as English subjects. Such strategies revealed the potency of theatrical representation in a society where, as Gillian Russell notes, “performance, display and spectatorship were essential components of the social mechanism.”
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References
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125 Monthly Review 15 (September 1794): 107–8Google Scholar.
126 Lavater, , Essays on Physiognomy, p. 80Google Scholar.
127 This was an early accusation. For example, see the St. James Chronicle (8 October 1794) on Holcroft's self-surrender to the court. More recently, it has been a stance taken by Thompson, E. P.. See The Poverty of Theory (1978; reprint, London, 1995), pp. 243–45Google Scholar, and less polemically, The Romantics: England in a Revolutionary Age (New York, 1997), pp. 87–89Google Scholar. But see Philp, Mark, Godwin's Political Justice, (Ithaca, N.Y., 1986), pp. 228–30Google Scholar, and his “Thompson, Godwin, and the French Revolution,” History Workshop Journal 39 (1995): 89–101Google Scholar.
128 Philp, , Godwin's Political Justice, pp. 169–73, 214–20, 229Google Scholar.
129 For the “acquitted felons” remark, see Secretary at War William Windham's speech in Parliament on 30 December 1794, Parliamentary History, 31:1027Google Scholar.
130 See The Times (26 January 1800); for its impact on Holcroft's life abroad, see his letter to Godwin, 17 February 1802, Bodleian Library (Bodl.), Oxford, MS Dep. c. 511.
131 Holcroft to Godwin, 29 April 1800, Bodl., MS Dep. c. 511; Holcroft to Godwin, 13 May 1800, Bodl., MS Dep. c. 511.
132 The Seditious Meetings Bill (1795) made owners and lessors of rooms used for meetings liable to heavy fines if they had not obtained the explicit permission of two magistrates to use the rooms for such purposes. The Treasonable Practices Bill (1795) adjusted and expanded the definition of treason to be more applicable to what Attorney General Sir John Scott called modern, “French” treason. See John Barrell, Imagining the King's Death, chap. 16.
133 See Worrall, , Radical Culture, pp. 17–34Google Scholar; Klancher, Jon, The Making of English Reading Audiences, 1790–1832 (Madison, Wise, 1987), pp. 113–19Google Scholar; Epstein, “Ritual Practice”; Barrell, “‘An Entire Change of Performances?’” pp. 11–50.
134 Philp, , Godwin's Political Justice, p. 173Google Scholar.
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