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'Chavs', 'Gyppos' and 'Scum?' class in twenty-first-century drama

chapter
posted on 2024-02-12, 09:34 authored by Siân Adiseshiah
<p>This chapter responds to a revival of interest in social class, particularly working-class identity, class relations and class exploitation on theatre stages and in scholarship in the twenty-first century. The focus is on Jez Butterworth’s Jerusalem (2009), Simon Stephens’ Port (2002) and Gillian Slovo’s The Riots (2011) and the ways in which these plays engage in a twenty-first-century class politics, and more particularly, participate in forms of political subjectivization of working-class identity as abject, racialized, excessive and stagnant – in opposition to a normative personhood of taste, restraint, moral attunement, flexibility, and the ability to self-script. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu, Jacques Rancière, Beverley Skeggs and Imogen Tyler, the chapter considers whether these plays discover ways in which to articulate working-class subjectivity in forms that resist assimilation to already familiar classed ways of knowing and offer distinctively new forms of political theatre that intervene transgressively in the struggle over the contemporary meaning of class.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of English & Journalism (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Twenty-first century drama: what happens now?

Pages/Article Number

149-171

Publisher

Palgave

ISBN

9781137484024

Date Submitted

2016-07-12

Date Accepted

2016-07-12

Date of First Publication

2016-07-12

Date of Final Publication

2016-07-12

ePrints ID

23383