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Cool Britannia? ‘In-Yer-Face’ Writing in the British Theatre Today
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 January 2009
Abstract
The appearance of a succession of controversial and attention-catching new plays on the British stage in the 'nineties has led to considerable public discussion – and not a little ostensible outrage. In ‘an interim report’, Aleks Sierz examines the rash of plays about sex, drugs, and violence – notably Trainspotting, Blasted, Mojo, and Shopping and Fucking – by twenty-something authors, and asks whether they have anything in common beyond a flamboyant theatricality and the desire to shock. After showing how Cool Britannia's manifestation on the national stage has provoked arguments for and against this ‘in-yer-face’ drama, he outlines some of the common themes – such as the crisis of masculinity and the postmodern sensibility – that characterize much contemporary new writing. He argues that while these young writers are certainly gifted and mature, only subsequent theatrical revivals of their work will show whether it has anything lasting to say. Aleks Sierz is theatre critic for Tribune, and currently writing a book about ‘in-yer-face’ drama.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1998
References
Notes and References
1. See the cover article, ‘Why London Rules’, Newsweek, 4 November 1996; Sunday Times, 5 April 1998.
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5. See anthologies such as Coming on Strong: New Writing from the Royal Court Theatre, including Peaches and Essex Girls (London: Faber, 1995), and Bush Theatre Plays (London: Faber, 1996). It is, however, significant that the Bush anthology features plays by women, most of which fall neither into the ‘urban ennui’ nor ‘lads’ play' categories.
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