首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
考研
A Feminist theatre is a genre that came to be widely recognized, theorized, studied and practiced in the wake of the seventies’
A Feminist theatre is a genre that came to be widely recognized, theorized, studied and practiced in the wake of the seventies’
admin
2019-04-17
26
问题
A Feminist theatre is a genre that came to be widely recognized, theorized, studied and practiced in the wake of the seventies’ Women’s Liberation Movement; it has generally been understood as describing and encompassing diverse theatrical work motivated by the recognition of and resistance to women’s marginalization within social and cultural systems that accord male privilege and dominance. Observing this, however, it is important to remember that historically women have "acted" out their resistance to mainstream, male-dominated theatre cultures, and that, since the seventies, feminist-theatre scholarship has looked to recover the works and performances of neglected pioneering, women-in-theatre figures. For instance, such scholarship has served to uncover the dramatic texts of the tenth-century, plays by Restoration women playwrights and dramas by Edwardian women concerned with suffrage and the Woman Question.
B In the seventies, recognition that women’s cultural, social, sexual, economic and political lives had been oppressed by male domination was what fueled a climate of Western feminism. Women came together in consciousness-raising groups to share their personal discontents and political dissatisfactions. The inequalities of the workplace, the education system, the "institution" of motherhood and the objectification of women’s bodies were common grievances that served to shape the four political demands of the UK’s Women’s Liberation Movement: for equal pay, equal education and opportunity, 24-hour nurseries and free contraception and abortion on demand.
C As a profession, theatre was a microcosm of the discrimination and inequalities operating in society at large. In 1981, feminist playwright and critic, Michelene Wandor, published an analysis of theatre and sexual politics that made explicit women’s second-class, "understudy" status in a male-dominated theatre industry. The lived, professional experience of being consigned to the role of understudy is what, in turn, encouraged women practitioners to found their own feminist-theatre groups. Monstrous Regiment, along with the Women’s Theatre Group(both companies were founded in the mid-seventies), were seminal to the innovation of a feminist-theatre tradition and to creating a counter-cultural body of women’s plays and performances. Many more groups were to follow in their wake such as Clapperclaws(1977)and Mrs. Worthington’s Daughters(1979). These companies played not only small-scale touring venues but were networked into women’s communities that hosted shows in non-theatre spaces, such as schools, community halls or youth clubs. Both organizationally and creatively they operated democratically and collaboratively, rather than hierarchically and individualistically. Ensemble-based acting and presentational styles were widely adopted.
D With the outcrop of feminist groups came more opportunities for women playwrights, and by the mid to late seventies, Caryl Churchill, Pam Gems, and Louise Page were moving dramatic representations of women’s lives and experiences center-stage — this as a counter-cultural challenge and alternative to the " malestream," canonical tradition of theatre. Thereafter, women dramatists coming to prominence in the eighties included Sarah Daniels, April De Angelis, Winsome Pinnock and Timberlake Wertenbaker. As testimony to the emergence of a body of Women’s playwriting, much of which was influenced by Second Wave feminism, in 1982 Methuen Drama launched the Plays By Women series. The first of four plays to be published in volume one of the series was Caryl Churchill’s Vinegar Tom: a play about witchcraft without any witches; a play where scenes locate in the seventeenth century, but songs intersperse and break up the action to insist that women’s oppression is not consigned to the historical past but is an urgent contemporary issue. Stylistically innovative and politically charged and premiered by Monstrous Regiment, Vinegar Tom along with other "women’s" plays by Churchill such as Cloud Nine or Top Girls, proved seminal to defining a feminist landscape in British theatre and were highly influential in terms of studying and theorizing feminist theatre, aesthetically and politically.
E Feminist theatre and performance that emerged from the Second Wave largely came to be defined , understood and analyzed in relation to three types of feminism: bourgeois/liberal, radical/ cultural and socialist/materialist. Listed in that order, the three feminisms were hierarchically conceived, with bourgeois/liberal feminism posited as the politically "weakest" given that it neither endorsed radical/cultural feminism’s desire to overthrow patriarchy in favor of women’s social, cultural and sexual empowerment, nor advocated the radical transformation of society’s economic, political and social structures as socialist/materialist feminism did. Each feminist dynamic also had its aesthetic counterpart: bourgeois/liberal feminism remained attached to conventional realistic forms, but sought to create more roles for women within the confines of traditional dramatic writing; radical/ cultural feminism became associated with and explored ideas and possibilities of a "women’s language" ; techniques and performance registers.
F However, the media backlash against feminism in the eighties, the widely promoted "top-girl Feminism"(as critiqued by Churchill in her play), and thereafter the individualistically styled " girl power" of the nineties and a younger, feminist Third Wave challenging the politics and values of Second Wave feminism, have all combined to make feminist theatre that much harder to generi-cally define and identify. Resistant voices in the nineties, such as Rebecca Pilchard and Judy Upton, picked up the complex feminist baton by dramatizing disenchanted and disadvantaged communities of young women. The iconoclast Sarah Kane, while distancing herself from the Second-Wave feminist tradition(notably by her rejection of the "woman" writer label), nonetheless reinvigorated structures of feminist feeling through her representations of gender wars and diseased masculinities, notably in her controversial debut play, Blasted.
G As a growing number of younger "women" playwrights make their debuts on contemporary British stages, it becomes increasingly clear that their diverse subjects—the financial crash of the American energy company Enron(Prebble, Enron), middle-class girls in trouble(Stenham, That Face)or "posh" boys behaving badly(Wade, Posh)—, challenge the gaze of the feminist critic that formerly looked to drama explicitly taking and playing the disenfranchised "woman’s part. " Indeed , in the theatre of Debbie Tucker Green, arguably one of the most exciting political voices to emerge on the British stage in the twenty-first century, feminism itself comes under scrutiny as, in her signature style of beautiful but brutal, black urban-speak, in plays such as Trade and Stoning Mary, Green interrogates the inability of women to achieve solidarity across social, cultural, economic and racial divides within a larger, epic landscape of a white Western world that singularly fails to care for disempowered "others. "
H In sum, feminist futures and the future of feminist theatre appear far less certain than in the defining moment of seventies activism and political theatre making. Yet, as "women" playwrights and practitioners dramatize epic questions of social injustices and inequalities in an increasingly globalized world, or evidence concern for what part feminism can play in terms of staging socially progressive , transformative possibilities and solutions, enduring questions of gender privilege and bias that formerly fueled the genre, surface as constant and significant reminders of the unfinished business of feminist theatre.
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 1? On your Answer Sheet, write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this.
In the seventies, a climate of Western feminism appeared because women began to realize their lower position in cultural, social, sexual, economic and political lives.
选项
A、YES
B、NO
C、NOT GIVEN
答案
B
解析
(文章第二段第一句话讲到,在七十年代,人们意识到女性的文化、社会、性、经济和政治生活方面长期受到男性统治的压迫,进一步推动了西方女性主义思潮。文章中用的是fuel表示“刺激;使变得更糟;使加剧”,而题干讲的是女性主义思潮的出现是由于女性意识到在她们在文化、社会、性、经济和政治生活方面地位低,与原文不符,因此陈述是错误的。)
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/UrVUFFFM
本试题收录于:
翻译硕士(翻译硕士英语)题库专业硕士分类
0
翻译硕士(翻译硕士英语)
专业硕士
相关试题推荐
Thespeechacttheorywasfirstputforwardby________.
InHongKong’shugeOceanTerminalshoppingcomplexPrudentialhasopenedashopalongside______fashionbrandssuchasPradaa
Afewyearsago,attheheightofthedotcomboom,itwaswidelyassumedthatapublishingrevolution,inwhichtheprintedword
Weshould______ourenergyandyouthtothedevelopmentofourcountry.
Pleasewriteacompositionof400wordsonthefollowingtopic:Somepeoplebelievethatvisitorstoothercountriesshouldfoll
Whenthetelevisionisgood,nothing—notthetheater,notthemagazines,ornewspapers—nothingisbetter.Butwhentelevisionis
______ananswer,theydecidedtosendanexpresstelegramtothem.
ThemostAwidelydiscussedalternativetothetraditionalcampusistheInternetUniversity—Bavoluntarycommunitytoscholars/
TheheadoftheLibraryofCongressistonameDonaldHall,awriterwhosedeceptivelysimplelanguagebuildsonimagesoftheN
随机试题
干酪样坏死的形态学特征有
你的部门因预算的限制,有必要进行整编。你请了本部门中一位经验丰富的人负责这项工作。他在你部门的每个领域都工作过,你感到他有能力完成这一任务,可他却似乎对这项任务的重要性反应漠然。此时,你应当采取哪种领导方式?()
药物的不良反应包括
下列关于国有土地使用权出让的最高年限的表述,正确的是()。
某厂新建总装车间工程在招标时,业主要求本工程按综合单价法计价,厂房虹吸雨排水工程按100万元专业工程暂估价计入机电安装工程报价。经竞标,A公司中标机电安装工程,B公司中标土建工程,两公司分别与业主签订了施工合同。 A公司中标后,考虑工期紧,劳动
开学不久,陈老师发现杨朗同学有许多毛病。陈老师心想,像杨朗这样的同学缺少的不是批评而是肯定和鼓励。一次,陈老师找他谈话说:“你有缺点,但你也有不少优点,可能你自己还没有发现。这样吧,我限你在两天内找到自己的一些长处,不然我可要批评你了。”第三天,杨朗很不好
在图7-3所示的DOS命令窗口中,所运行的Windows命令是(1)。A.ipconfig/renewB.tracertwww.rkb.gov.cnC.nslookupwww.rkb.gov.cnD.rou
Tedhasbeenlivingintownforonlyhalfayear;yetheseemstobe______witheveryonehemeets.
Janewasmade(wash)______thetruckforaweekasapunishment.
Haveyoueverseenamovieinwhichabuildingwasburneddownorabridgewas【B1】______?Haveyouseenafilminwhichatrain
最新回复
(
0
)