2015
DOI: 10.1215/00982601-2875329
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“The Glass of Fashion and the Mould of Form”: The Histrionic Mirror and Georgian-Era Performance

Abstract: This essay explores the impact of mirrors on Georgian-era theatrical and social performance. It suggests that looking glasses—as they burgeoned in eighteenth-century playhouses, offstage, onstage, and backstage—provided key sites for actors and audiences to engage with both the metaphysical and empirical implications of specular display. It further reveals how mirrors functioned as cultural touchstones in critical debates over the correlation between morals and manners, authenticity and facsimile, ideal imitat… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…One such study is Dene Barnett and Massy‐Westropp's (1987) Art of Gesture , which Barnett presents as a ‘descriptive and critical catalogue’ of techniques (p. 11). Others have instead proposed more analytical discussion of how, in Robinson's (2015, p. 57) words, ‘18th‐century aesthetic theories … become tied to actors’ use of them’. Stern's (2000) Rehearsal from Shakespeare to Sheridan thus examines shifts and continuities within professional practice across two centuries of professional theatre.…”
Section: Acting As a Professionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One such study is Dene Barnett and Massy‐Westropp's (1987) Art of Gesture , which Barnett presents as a ‘descriptive and critical catalogue’ of techniques (p. 11). Others have instead proposed more analytical discussion of how, in Robinson's (2015, p. 57) words, ‘18th‐century aesthetic theories … become tied to actors’ use of them’. Stern's (2000) Rehearsal from Shakespeare to Sheridan thus examines shifts and continuities within professional practice across two centuries of professional theatre.…”
Section: Acting As a Professionmentioning
confidence: 99%