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E-grāmata: Playing Sick: Performances of Illness in the Age of Victorian Medicine

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Few life occurrences shaped individual and collective identities within Victorian-era society as critically as witnessing or suffering from illness. The prevalence of illness narratives within late nineteenth-century popular culture was made manifest on the periods British and American stages, where theatrical embodiments of illness were indisputable staples of actors repertoires.Playing Sick: Performances of Illness in the Age of Victorian Medicine reconstructs how actors embodied three of the eras most provocative illnesses: tuberculosis, drug addiction, and mental illness. In placing performances of illness within wider medicocultural contexts, Meredith Conti analyzes how such depictions confirmed or resisted salient constructions of diseases and the diseased. Contis case studies, which range from Eleonora Duses portrayal of the consumptive courtesan Marguerite Gautier to Henry Irvings performance of senile dementia in King Lear, help to illuminate the interdependence of medical science and theatre in constructing nineteenth-century illness narratives. Through reconstructing these performances, Conti isolates from the periods acting practices a lexicon of embodied illness: a flexible set of physical and vocal techniques that performers employed to theatricalize the sick body. In an age when medical science encouraged a gradual decentering of the patient from their own diagnosis and treatment, late nineteenth-century performances of illness symbolically restored the sick to positions of visibility and consequence.
List of figures
ix
Abbreviations x
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(22)
PART I Performing consumption
23(64)
1 Rosy cheeks and red handkerchiefs: Performing Camille's consumption before, during, and after the contagionist turn
25(38)
2 Foreign invasions: The transatlantic consumptives of Sarah Bernhardt and Eleonora Duse
63(24)
PART II Performing drug addiction
87(54)
3 Early dramaturgies of drug addiction in stage adaptations of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Sherlock Holmes
89(27)
4 Master, martyr, monster: The addict archetypes of William Hooker Gillette and Richard Mansfield
116(25)
PART III Performing mental illness
141(66)
5 The madwoman in the theatre: Normalizing the disordered female mind in Ellen Terry's Lyceum repertoire
143(32)
6 Neurotic princes and enfeebled kings: Stigmatizing male mental illness in Henry Irving's mad roles
175(32)
Conclusion 207(6)
Index 213
Meredith Conti is Assistant Professor of Theatre at the University at Buffalo, SUNY, USA. A historian of nineteenth-century theatre and performance, Contis work has appeared in Journal of American Drama and Theatre, Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, and Victorian Medicine and Popular Culture (2015).