Abstract
In recent years, melodrama has increasingly been recognized not only as an important element in popular theatre studies, but for the intrinsic importance of the form itself. Less considered has been the relationship of the material of melodrama to the ‘real life’ it reflected in a highly conventionalized yet ultimately (for its audiences), recognizable fashion. Here, Jim Davis looks at one major category, nautical melodrama, setting the images of the navy and of sailors that it created alongside factual and critical accounts of life at sea in the first half of the nineteenth century. He conveys both the pressures that existed for redress of abuses, and the consequent balance between coercion and subversion in the melodramas themselves – drawing in particular on the memoirs of Douglas Jerrold to explore aspects of the ambiguity to be found in contemporary attitudes. Jim Davis, who is the author of several books and articles in the area of nineteenth century theatre history, is presently teaching in the School of Theatre Studies at the University of New South Wales.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Visual Arts and Performing Arts
Cited by
29 articles.
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1. The Cambridge Companion to English Melodrama;CAMBR COMPANION LIT;2018-10-04
2. Index;The Cambridge Companion to English Melodrama;2018-10-04
3. Guide to Further Reading;The Cambridge Companion to English Melodrama;2018-10-04
4. Metamodern Melodrama and Contemporary Mass Culture;The Cambridge Companion to English Melodrama;2018-10-04
5. Psychoanalysis and Melodrama;The Cambridge Companion to English Melodrama;2018-10-04