ABSTRACT

This book examines the concept of darkness through a range of cultures, histories, practices and experiences. It engages with darkness beyond its binary positioning against light to advance a critical understanding of the ways in which darkness can be experienced, practised and conceptualised.

Humans have fundamental relationships with light and dark that shape their regular social patterns and rhythms, enabling them to make sense of the world. This book ‘throws light’ on the neglect of these social patterns to emphasize how the diverse values, meanings and influences of darkness have been rarely considered. It also examines the history of our relationship with the dark and highlights how normative attitudes towards it have emerged, while also emphasising its cultural complexity by considering a contemporary range of alternative experiences and practices. Challenging notions of darkness as negative, as the antithesis of illumination and enlightenment, this book explores the rich potential of darkness to stimulate our senses and deepen our understandings of different spaces, cultural experiences and creative engagements.

Offering a rich exploration of an emergent field of study across the social sciences and humanities, this book will be useful for academics and students of cultural and media studies, design, geography, history, sociology and theatre who seek to investigate the creative, cultural and social dimensions of darkness.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

Venturing into the dark: gloomy multiplicities

part I|52 pages

Histories of the dark

chapter 2|11 pages

Affordances of the night

Work after dark in the ancient worldl

chapter 3|12 pages

Shakespeare’s darkness

A stage and state of mind

chapter 4|11 pages

In the night garden

Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens, London 1800–1859

part II|47 pages

Cultural practices in the dark

chapter 6|12 pages

Purda

The curtain of darkness

chapter 7|13 pages

Inuit’s perception of darkness

A singular feature

chapter 8|10 pages

Darkness in video game landscapes

Corporeal and representational entanglements

part III|51 pages

Sensing darkness

chapter 10|11 pages

Creatures of the night

Bodies, rhythms and Aurora Borealis

chapter 11|12 pages

Contact zones

The Galloway Forest Dark Sky Park as creative milieu

chapter 12|11 pages

How does the dark sound?

chapter 13|15 pages

Ghosts and Empties

part IV|64 pages

Designing with darkness

chapter 14|13 pages

Going dark

The theatrical legacy of Battersea Art Centre’s Playing in the Dark season

chapter 16|14 pages

Darkness as canvas

chapter 18|12 pages

Afterword

Revisiting the dark: diverse encounters and experiences