Front cover image for The Orient on the Victorian stage

The Orient on the Victorian stage

"The Orient on the Victorian Stage examines the representation of the Middle East in a variety of nineteenth-century entertainment forms, such as panoramas, melodrama, pantomime, ballet, and opera. Ziter argues that changes in stage craft reflected the emerging idea that the significance of objects was evident in contextual relations, and he relates the development of this stage craft to orientalist exhibitions and museum displays. Unlike other theatre histories and studies of orientalism, this book examines broader strategies of spatial representation and focuses on performance and popular culture. Ziter explores the plays, productions, and displays at a number of venues, including Drury Lane, Covent Garden, the Great Exhibition of 1851, the Crystal Palace at Sydenham, and the British Museum, among others. The book also includes an analysis of Byron's image in the theatre and an analysis of his play Sardanapalus."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2003
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2003
Geschichte 1832-1902
ix, 235 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780521818292, 052181829X
51738851
"Real sets," geography, and race
Spectacle and surveillance in orientalist panoramas
Fantasies of miscegenation on the romantic stage
The built-out East of popular ethnography
The biblical East in theatres and exhibitions
The geography of imperial theatre