Energetically places modern British drama and contemporary critical and
cultural theory in dialogue, demonstrating how theory allows fresh
insights into familiar plays. Each chapter pairs a well-known play from
the post-war period with a classic theory text, the theoretical text is
not simply applied to the dramatic one: instead, the play and the
theoretical text reflect on each other in a mutual illumination.
Examples include:
So Look Back in Anger is read by and reads Lacan's Signification of the
Phallus
Pinter's The Homecoming is made uncanny with Freud
Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead finds affinities with
Lyotard's The Postmodern Condition
Timberlake Wertenbaker's Our Country's Good agrees and disagrees with
Edward Said
Sarah Kane's Blasted thinks through trauma with Shoshana Felman. In each
case, the theoretical position is explained lucidly and economically.
The result is a series of new interpretations not only of the plays, but
of the theoretical texts, which take on new relevance when linked with
modern British drama. The first textbook of its kind, linking
contemporary drama with critical and cultural theory.