Products>Social Housing in Performance: The English Council Estate on and off Stage

Social Housing in Performance: The English Council Estate on and off Stage

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Overview

This book explores the ways that council estates have been represented in England across a range of performance forms. Drawing on examples from mainstream, site-specific and resident-led performance works, it considers the political potential of contemporary performance practices concerned with the council estate. Depictions of the council estate are brought into dialogue with global representations of what Chris Richardson and Hans Skott-Myhre call the ‘hood’, to tease out the specific features of the British context and situate the work globally.

Katie Beswick’s study provides a timely contribution to the ongoing national and global interest in social housing. As the housing market grows ever more insecure, and estates are charged with political rhetoric, theatre and socially engaged art set or taking place on estates takes on a new potency. Mainstream theatre works examined include Rita, Sue and Bob Too and A State Affair at the Soho Theatre, Port at the National Theatre, and DenMarked at the Battersea Arts Centre. The book also explores the National Youth Theatre’s Slick and Roger Hiorns’ Seizure, as well as community-based and resident led performances by Fourthland, Jordan McKenzie, Fugitive Images and Jane English.

Offering a comprehensive critical overview of performance practices set or taking place on council estates, this book explores the resistant potential of ’council estate performance’, which has proliferated since the turn of the 21st century.

This is the first book focusing specifically on the phenomena of council estate performance, a phenomenon that has proliferated in in the 21st century
It draws on contemporary theories of space and place drawn from architecture, sociology, geography and performance studies to explore a range of performance practices set or taking place on council estates
It addresses ongoing debates regarding housing provision and the potential role of the arts in re-imagining and revitalizing communities in the face of the housing crisis

Acknowledgements

Three places: a preface
Introduction: The council estate, definitions and parameters
Chapter one: Quotidian performance of the council estate
Chapter two: Class and the council estate in mainstream theatre
Chapter three: Located on the estate
Chapter four: Resident artists
Conclusion: Three thoughts

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Katie Beswick’s book addresses the crisis in UK council housing boldly, but also with great care and sensitivity. Social Housing in Performance critiques the ways in which council estates are presented to us in the establishment media, and puts forward instead a compelling new typology for understanding housing issues through performance practice.

After decades in which social housing in England has been neglected, Beswick’s deeply considered analysis of estate performance is very welcome. She examines not only how individual performances have figured working class life but also how these performances are caught up with broader perceptions of social housing and with British theatre’s own highly fraught class politics. This is a timely and important book.

Katie Beswick is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Exeter, UK. Her research focuses on the intersections between theatre and structural inequality, with an emphasis on race and class. She has worked as a performer, writer, facilitator of applied theatre and as a social housing officer.

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