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Historicising the past in the interests of the present, she sought to make visible the politics of power and of social control: the regulation of sexuality ( Cloud Nine, 1979), land ( Light Shining, 1976), property ( Owners, 1982) and punishment ( Soft Cops, 1984). Her stage plays from the 1970s and 1980s are centrally concerned, therefore, with theatricalising a socialist and feminist critique of the injustices and inequalities produced by late twentieth-century western capitalism and patriarchy. Socialism and feminism are not ‘synonymous’ in Churchill's view, but as she explained in an interview in the late 1980s, ‘I feel strongly about both and wouldn't be interested in a form of one that didn't include the other’. Where several of the playwrights covered in this volume do not necessarily see themselves as feminist writers especially, Churchill is someone whose playwriting career and political outlook have consciously been shaped by a continuing commitment to feminism and to socialism.
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by Taner Edis and Amy Sue Bix We skeptics do more these days than shake our head at psychics or roll our eyes at UFO-abduction tales.
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Columbia University Press, New York, 1997. Hysteria, Perversion, and Paranoia in The Canterbury Tales by Becky Renee McLaughlin, 9781501518416, available at Book Depository with free delivery. In consequence, Churchill's theatre has been enormously important to subsequent generations of playwrights (women and men) and to the evolution of a contemporary feminist theatre practice and scholarship on the English stage and in the theatre academy. Tales of Hysteria Review of Hystories: Hysterical Epidemics and Modern Culture, by Elaine Showalter. For many years, she was one of only two contemporary women playwrights in the English theatre to receive critical and scholarly attention (the other was Pam Gems). Caryl Churchill has the longest playwriting career of any of the writers profiled in this volume.
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