Abstract
ABSTRACT: The article focuses on Caryl Churchill’s This Is a Chair (1997) and Far Away (2000) to analyse Churchill’s political shape shifting at the turn of the millennium, when ideological resistance to capitalism had all but disappeared. Positioning This Is a Chair as a critical-political turning point in Churchill’s repertoire, I argue that René Magritte’s visual thinking about the arbitrary relation of words and things is seminal to Churchill’s struggle to create a political-theatre canvas. In relation to Far Away, I demonstrate how Churchill’s critique of global capitalism involves a dissolve – the appearing, yet disappearing, traces of the Brechtian dramaturgy of her earlier playwriting, and a renewal of the epic through a composition that is both experiential and elliptical. Ultimately, the article argues that the need to impress on audiences the urgency of dis-identifying with capitalism informs Churchill’s political perspective through a dialectic shift from Herbert Blau’s “imminence of a ‘not-yet’” to the negative of “but not that.”
Publisher
University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory
Reference32 articles.
1. Bringing the Global Home: The Commitment of Caryl Churchill’s The Skriker
2. Benedict, David. “The Mother of Reinvention.” Interview with Caryl Churchill. Independent. 19 April 1997: Arts Section, 4. 5 October 2012
3. Billington, Michael (2000). “Surreal Shocks from Caryl Churchill.” Rev. of Far Away. Guardian1 December 2000. Reprinted Theatre Record,. 20 (): 1578.
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