Getting into the act : women playwrights in London, 1776-1829 / Ellen Donkin.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780415082501
- PR734.W6 D66 1995
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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SPAA Library General Collection | On Shelves | PR734.W6 D66 1995 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0002789 |
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PR625 P66 2016 Theatre and empire / | PR658.T4 T46 2023 From playtext to performance on the early modern stage : how did they do it? / | PR708.W6 A53 2016 Female playwrights and eighteenth-century comedy : negotiating marriage on the london stage. | PR734.W6 D66 1995 Getting into the act : women playwrights in London, 1776-1829 / | PR736 .R35 1999eb 1956 and all that : the making of modern British drama / | PR739.F45 C36 2000 The Cambridge companion to modern British women playwrights / | PR739.F45 F37 2019 Women's playwriting and the women's movement, 1890-1918 / |
P.B
Getting Into the Act is a vigorous and refreshing account of seven female playwrights who, against all odds, enjoyed professional success in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Ellen Donkin relates fascinating, disturbing tales about the male theatre managers to whom they were indebted, and the trials and prejudices they endured, ranging from accusations of plagiarism to sexual harassment. This scarred turbulent early history still resonates in the late twentieth-century. The current ratio of female to male playwrights is virtually unchanged. Old patterns of male control persist, and playwriting continues to be a hazardous occupation for women. But within these scarred earlier histories there are equally powerful narratives of self-revelation, endurance, and professional triumph that may point to a new way forward. Getting Into the Act is entertaining and informative reading for anyone, from scholar to general reader, who is interested in the history and gender politics of the stage.
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