ABSTRACT

In this extensively revised and updated edition of her classic work, Look Back in Gender, Michelene Wandor confirms the symbiotic relationship between drama and gender in a provocative look at key, representative British plays from the last fifty years.
Repositioning the text at the heart of hteatre studies, Wandor surveys plays by Ayckbourn, Beckett, Churchill, Daniels, Friel, Hare, Kane, Osborne, Pinter, Ravenhill, Wertenbaker, Wesker and others. Her nuanced argument, central to any analysis of contemporary drama, discusses:
*the imperative of gender in the playwright's imagination
*the function of gender as a major determinant of the text's structural and narrative drives
*the impact of socialism and feminism on post-war British drama, and the relevance of feminist dynamics in drama
*differences in the representation of the fmaily, sexuality and the mother, before and after 1968
*the impact of the slogan that the 'personal is political' on contemporary form and content.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part 13I|25 pages

chapter Chapter 1|12 pages

The imperative of gender

chapter Chapter 2|11 pages

The imperative of context

Family and gender

part 39II|73 pages

chapter Chapter 3|35 pages

The 1950s

chapter Chapter 4|15 pages

The 1960s

chapter Chapter 5|7 pages

The Lady Macbeth syndrome

The 1950s and 1960s: conclusions

part 113III|41 pages

chapter Chapter 7|33 pages

New contexts

chapter Chapter 8|6 pages

A theatrical legacy

part 155IV|39 pages

chapter Chapter 9|33 pages

The 1970s

chapter Chapter 10|4 pages

The 1970s

Conclusions

part 195V|28 pages

chapter Chapter 11|23 pages

The 1980s

chapter Chapter 12|3 pages

The 1980s

Conclusions

part 223VI|15 pages

chapter Chapter 13|10 pages

The 1990s

chapter Chapter 14|3 pages

The 1990s

Conclusions

part 239VII|21 pages

chapter Chapter 15|12 pages

Turning the tables

chapter Chapter 16|7 pages

Coda

chapter |1 pages

Epilogue