Publication
Title
Language, sound and textuality: Caryl Churchill's 'Identical Twins' as neo-avant-garde (radio) drama
Author
Abstract
This chapter uses Caryl Churchill’s 'Identical Twins' (1968) as a case study to investigate the role of radio within the neo-avant-garde, relating it to the historical avant-garde and (late) modernism, as well as movements such as postdramatic theatre and the Theatre of the Absurd. While Churchill’s destabilising treatment of language and speech as sound or noise aligns her with avant-garde predecessors in England and abroad, the postwar institutional context of the BBC is explored archivally as a typically neo-avant-garde environment that aims to reconcile new aesthetic experiences with concerns about audience reception, particularly through stereo. Usually exploited by neo-avant-garde artists as an experimental feature, it is atypically used by the BBC production team as a means to constrain the radical identity blurring so characteristic of 'Identical Twins'. An intermedial analysis investigates its status as an ‘interior duologue’, as well as the friction between theatre performance, textuality and recording. Finally, the chapter studies the formative role of radio within Churchill’s oeuvre and its lasting effect on her later drama, to argue more generally that the medium played an important but neglected part in the theatrical revolution that innovated the British stage from the 1950s onward.
Language
English
Source (book)
Tuning in to the neo-avant-garde: experimental radio plays in the postwar period / Arteel, Inge [edit.]; et al.
Publication
Manchester : Manchester University Press , 2021
ISBN
978-1-5261-5571-9
Volume/pages
p. 213-235
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
VABB-SHW
Record
Identifier
Creation 28.02.2021
Last edited 23.06.2023
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