In Interculturalism and Resistance in the London Theater, Mita Choudhury
argues that the eighteenth-century British theater is a dynamic
expression and register of the anxieties and tensions of a culture
poised for global supremacy. By strategic consideration of political and
intellectual alliances that the theater inspired and stifled, and
through discussions of a wide cross-section of performance practices
from the time of Dryden to that of Inchbald, Choudhury demonstrates the
power of performativity in a culture of ascendancy. She argues that
nationalism, as both active movement and contemplative ideology, cannot
be separated from the themes of expansionism that propel the many
incentives, principles, and sites of performance. In an original
contribution to criticism, Interculturalism and Resistance demonstrates
the eighteenth-century theatrical culture's ambivalence toward what has
recently been described as the exoticism of multiculturalism.