George Farquhar (1677–1707) is one of the most successful and enduringly popular Restoration playwrights. His two masterpieces, The Recruiting Officer and The Beaux’ Stratagem, are still regularly performed today. Yet aspects of Farquhar’s biography, and in particular his Irish roots and family life, have remained obscure. This is the first study to treat Farquhar’s works as documents of migration and the fragmented identity that resulted. Told in reverse chronological order, beginning with Farquhar’s last and best-known works, it reveals previously undiscovered material about his life and connections. Born in Londonderry, Farquhar arrived in London at the end of the 1690s but struggled throughout his life to find acceptance in the English literary culture. David Roberts explores how Farquhar used comedy to negotiate his Anglo-Irish Protestant identity while perpetually being treated as an outsider. George Farquhar: A Migrant Life Reversed challenges traditional critical thinking on historiographic approaches to scholarly biography and offers a complex but highly readable account of the interpenetrating pasts, presents and futures of the migrant writer.
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Acknowledgements Introduction: A Brief Life Forwards 1. A Life Reversed 2. 1709: A Widow’s Pension 3. 1707: Death-Bed Comedy 4. 1706: Military Comedy 5. 1704: In the Army 6. 1701: Moral George 7. 1700: The Irishman Abroad 8. 1698: Narratives of Arrival 9. 1696: Dear Bob 10. 1690: Farquhar Family History Notes Bibliography Index
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This captivating biography, full of previously undiscovered material, tells the story of Restoration playwright George Farquhar in reverse: from his death in poverty, through the success of The Beaux Stratagem and A Recruiting Officer, and ending with his birth in Londonderry. Essential reading not only for those interested in Farquhar or eighteenth-century theatre, but also in the literature of the dispossessed, George Farquhar: a Migrant Life Reversed is the first study to combine elegant readings of Farquhar’s plays with migrancy criticism. Farquhar, it shows, was not just one of the most charming, funny and elusive of Restoration playwrights; he was also more acutely aware of cultural dislocation, and hence more modern, than any other writer of the period.
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The first biography in 70 years of a key Anglo-Irish writer, from the perspective of migrant experience.
Offers the first biography of George Farquhar since 1948
The Bloomsbury series of Cultural Histories of Theatre and Performance recognizes that historical knowledge has always been contested and revised. Since the turn of the twenty first century, the transformation of conventional understandings of culture created through new political realities and communication technologies together with paradigm shifts in anthropology, psychology and other cognate fields have challenged established methodologies and ways of thinking about how we do history. The series embraces volumes that take on those challenges while enlarging notions of theatre and performance through the representation of the lived experience of past performance makers and spectators. The series aim is to be both inclusive and expansive, including studies on topics that range temporally and spatially, from the locally-specific to the intercultural and transnational.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350147478
Publisert
2020-01-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Methuen Drama
Vekt
340 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
240

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

David Roberts is Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Dean of the Arts and Media at Birmingham City University, UK. Recent books include Thomas Betterton (2010), The Library of a Seventeenth-Century Actor (2012), Restoration Plays and Players (2014), and Games for English Literature (2016), co-authored with Izabela Hopkins. Articles in major journals including Shakespeare Quarterly, ELH, New Theatre Quarterly, and The Times Literary Supplement. My biography of Betterton was shortlisted for the American Library Association Theatre Book Prize and longlisted for the Society for Theatre Research Book Prize.