Moving Women Centre Stage : Structures of Feminist-Tragic Feeling

Aston, Elaine Frances (2017) Moving Women Centre Stage : Structures of Feminist-Tragic Feeling. Journal of Contemporary Drama in English, 5 (2).

[thumbnail of Moving submission ready for proofing]
PDF (Moving submission ready for proofing)
Moving_submission_ready_for_proofing.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial.

Download (575kB)

Abstract

In September 2015, Vicky Featherstone, Artistic Director of London’s Royal Court Theatre, was widely reported in the British press as commenting on the lack of female roles equivalent in stature to the tragic figures of Shakespeare’s Lear and Hamlet, or Miller’s Willy Loman. Her observation that audiences are more “comfortable” with a “male narrative” sparked considerable debate. My article engages with and develops this debate by turning a feminist gaze on two plays in Featherstone’s Royal Court repertoire: Penelope Skinner’s Linda and Zinnie Harris’s How to Hold Your Breath, both of which premiered in 2015. Mapping feminist thinking on to Raymond Williams’s reflections on “modern tragedy,” I conceive of a feminist-tragic feeling as crossing the divide between the political and the tragic. Formally, I argue this encourages a move away from the generically-bound categorisation of tragedy with its attendant definitions and theories, and makes it possible to think in more expansive, fluid, genre-crossing ways of what Rita Felski terms a “tragic sensibility.” Ultimately, through close readings of Linda and How to Hold Your Breath, I argue how each structures a feminist-tragic feeling for a world in which Western privilege has repeatedly failed to democratise.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Journal of Contemporary Drama in English
Additional Information:
© 2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.
ID Code:
88857
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
23 Nov 2017 00:29
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
03 Oct 2024 00:07