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Theatre and Violence

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If violence is a terrible thing, why do we watch it? Nevitt explores the use of violence in theatre and its effect on spectators. Critically engaging with examples of stage combat, rape, terrorism, wrestling and historical re-enactments, she argues that studying violence through theatre can be part of a desire to create a more peaceful world.

98 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 12, 2013

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Lucy Nevitt

2 books

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Mahtab Safdari.
Author 53 books43 followers
January 26, 2026
Theatre and Violence is one of those rare books that refuses to treat violence as mere spectacle. Instead, it asks how theatre stages, interrogates, and refracts violence—political, social, and aesthetic. For anyone who works in theatre, this is not just theory but a mirror held up to practice.
Nevitt’s strength lies in her refusal to romanticize. She avoids the glamour of blood on stage or the thrill of shock value, situating theatre instead within broader social dynamics: war, protest, oppression, and resistance. Violence here is not an isolated act but a cultural grammar, and theatre becomes the site where that grammar is examined.

Her case studies range widely, from political theatre to performance art, each handled with clarity. She shows how theatre can expose the mechanics of violence while staging it as choreography, spectacle, or illusion. Audiences witness harm without harm occurring—violence as language rather than act.

The prose can be dense, and the structure leans academic rather than theatrical. Yet the weight is rewarding. Nevitt’s rigor is undeniable, and her refusal to simplify makes the insights sharper. This is not a book of easy answers; it insists on complexity.

Most striking is her insistence that theatre teaches us how to watch violence. We don’t merely see it—we learn to interpret, recoil, normalize, or resist. That framing makes the book essential not only for scholars but for practitioners. Every staging of violence carries ethical weight, whether it is a stylized fight, a WWE spectacle, or a solo performance edging into self-harm.

Nevitt shows that theatre refracts violence, forcing us to confront its cultural meanings. It is a profound, unsettling, and necessary insight—a book to be read with the lights on, and with the conscience awake.
Profile Image for Ανδριάνα Μουρελάτου.
Author 1 book8 followers
January 23, 2018
Αρκετά ενδιαφέρον βιβλίο. Όμως λόγο του μικρού του μεγέθους, θα μπορούσε να είχε σταθεί περισσότερο στη βία στο θέατρο και λιγότερο στη βία στο θέαμα γενικά.
Profile Image for Kit Asfeldt.
143 reviews5 followers
January 11, 2021
It had been a minute since I had read any sort of theory in relation to the craft of acting, and what a timely read it was. To finish this at almost the exact same time the capitol was stormed drew so many connections in my head about the performative nature of the moment, and really strengthened the ideas put forth in this book.
11 reviews
October 16, 2019
Clear enough, but really dry. The research is good, but the arguments are a little one sided for something designed to be comprehensive. No flavour to the writing at all.
Profile Image for Hari Raelyn.
21 reviews1 follower
December 15, 2020
Really fascinating analyses, a lot of really well-explained theories that span across theatre and writing academia.
Profile Image for Col.
141 reviews
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February 17, 2025
finally going through all the books I’ve been reading for school (in full) to log them
Profile Image for WaterstonesBirmingham.
220 reviews48 followers
February 7, 2017
This is an incredibly interesting and insightful little book about violence in the theatre.
It talks about issues such as when violence is seen as acceptable (canon and historical plays) and when it was considered as gratuitous and unnecessary (Blasted, Saved)
It briefly explored ideas of masculinity, rape and verbatim theatre being useful as a way of healing after violence, specifically the theatre that came out of South Africa after the end of apartheid.

It requires prior knowledge of a lot of the plays discussed but raises some very interesting points about what we do and don't see as extreme in theatre and how these extremes challenge our ideas.

Not for the faint hearted.

Grace
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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