Teenage dreams : power and imagination in David Greig's Yellow Moon and The Monster in the Hall

Autor: Reid, Trish
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2016
Předmět:
ISSN: 1477-2264
1048-6801
Popis: In many contemporary theatre productions for teenage audiences, a power\ud struggle is apparent between young people, who are typically the focus of narrative\ud attention, and the adult world, which they are in the process of entering. This article\ud focuses on two of David Greig’s most successful works for young people, Yellow\ud Moon (2006) and The Monster in the Hall (2010). In particular it explores the concept\ud of aetonormativity as coined by the children’s literature critic Maria Nikolajeva in\ud 2010. Nikolajeva’s theoretical intervention builds on power-oriented critiques of\ud children’s literature, which have been in the ascendancy in the last couple of decades,\ud and is intended to demonstrate that adult normativity controls the way children’s\ud literature is patterned. Consequently, it provides a useful starting point for an\ud exploration of the power dynamics that underwrite the material practices of theatre for\ud young audiences (TYA). Acknowledging the usefulness of this concept, I\ud nevertheless suggest that in Yellow Moon and The Monster in the Hall, Greig effects a\ud partial redistribution of power between the adult and the audience in the TYA\ud exchange. Greig’s subtlety in the use and handling of the concept of power, here as\ud elsewhere, resists over-simplification.
Databáze: OpenAIRE