In Writings on Cities Henri Lefebvre calls for a
‘renewed right to urban life’. He maintains that
‘we must thus make the effort to reach out towards a new humanism, a
new praxis, another man, that of urban society’. City spaces are used
in a number of contemporary Irish site-specific theatre productions to explore
histories of oppression and social injustice, and to imagine a new humanist
praxis for society. The international multi-artform production The
Conquest of Happiness (2013) was inspired by Bertrand
Russell’s commitment to human happiness in defiance of war and
suffering in his book The Conquest of Happiness (1930) and in
his many political and philosophical writings. In this article Eva Urban
critically examines the ways in which the performance in Northern Ireland
attempted to embody Russell’s humanism and related critical concepts
to encourage active citizenship. She considers to what extent the dramaturgical
options employed inthe production applied Russell’s ideas and those
of other thinkers by developing critical representations of inhumanity,
challenging authoritarianism, and exploring humanist ideals. Eva Urban is a
British Academy Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Faculty of English,
University of Cambridge, and an Associate of Clare Hall, Cambridge. She is
theauthor of Community Politics and the Peace Process in Contemporary
Northern Irish Drama (Peter Lang, 2011) and her articles on
political drama and Irish studies have been published in New Theatre
Quarterly, Etudes Irlandaises, and
Caleidoscopio.