ABSTRACT

The Dark Theatre is an indispensable text for activist communities wondering what theatre might have to do with their futures, students and scholars across Theatre and Performance Studies, Urban Studies, Cultural Studies, Political Economy and Social Ecology.

The Dark Theatre returns to the bankrupted warehouse in Hope (Sufferance) Wharf in London’s Docklands where Alan Read worked through the 1980s to identify a four-decade interregnum of ‘cultural cruelty’ wreaked by financialisation, austerity and communicative capitalism. Between the OPEC Oil Embargo and the first screening of The Family in 1974, to the United Nations report on UK poverty and the fire at Grenfell Tower in 2017, this volume becomes a book about loss.

In the harsh light of such loss is there an alternative to the market that profits from peddling ‘well-being’ and pushes prescriptions for ‘self-help’, any role for the arts that is not an apologia for injustice? What if culture were not the solution but the problem when it comes to the mitigation of grief? Creativity not the remedy but the symptom of a structural malaise called inequality? Read suggests performance is no longer a political panacea for the precarious subject but a loss adjustor measuring damages suffered, compensations due, wrongs that demand to be put right. These field notes from a fire sale are a call for angry arts of advocacy representing those abandoned as the detritus of cultural authority, second-order victims whose crime is to have appealed for help from those looking on, audiences of sorts.

part I|158 pages

The loss adjustor

chapter 1|51 pages

The Dark Theatre

Bankruptcy and the logics of expulsion

chapter 3|43 pages

All the Home’s a Stage

Social reproduction and everyday life

chapter |7 pages

Interlude

Dreadful trade: the vertigo of attractions

part II|142 pages

Living currency

chapter 4|27 pages

Irreparable State

Compensations of performance

chapter 5|29 pages

Arrested Life

Ecology of the new enclosures

chapter 6|38 pages

Cultural Cruelty

Extraordinary rendition and acoustic shock

chapter 7|36 pages

Poor History

Field notes from a fire sale

chapter |5 pages

Outstanding Debts

chapter |2 pages

The Milliner’s shop

chapter |1 pages

La Vita Nuova