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LIVRES

The circus and victorian society

Assael, Brenda
Charlottesville & London : University of Virginia Press, 2005

It was during the Victorian era that the circus, whose origins lay in the fairground world, emerged as a commercialized entertainment that we would recognize today. This development was intricately tied to a widespread demand for circus acts by a broad range of classes. In The Circus and Victorian Society, Brenda Assael examines this interest in the circus as an artistic form within the context of a vibrant, and sometimes not so respectable, consumer market. In doing so, she provides not only the first scholarly history of the Victorian circus but also a new view of nineteenth-century popular culture, which has usually been seen as the preserve only of the working class.

The Victorian circus ring was a showcase for equestrian battle scenes, Chinese jugglers, clowns, female acrobats, and child performers. In addition to their wondrous qualities, unabashed displays of physical power, and sometimes subversive humor, however, Assael reveals how such acts were also rendered as grotesque, lewd, or dangerous.

The consuming public’s desire to see the very kinds of displays that reformers wished to regulate put the circus establishment in a difficult position. Wishing to create a respectable reputation for itself while also functioning as a profitable business, the industry was engaged in a struggle that required the appeasement of both the regulator and the consumer. This conflict informs us not only of the complicated role that the circus played in Victorian society but also provides a unique view into a collective psyche fraught by contradiction and anxiety.
It was during the Victorian era that the circus, whose origins lay in the fairground world, emerged as a commercialized entertainment that we would recognize today. This development was intricately tied to a widespread demand for circus acts by a broad range of classes. In The Circus and Victorian Society, Brenda Assael examines this interest in the circus as an artistic form within the context of a vibrant, and sometimes not so respectable, ...


Cote : 791.309 42 A8441c 2005

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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

Sensational imbalance : the child acrobat and the mid-Victorians

Assael, Brenda
2016

The development of the acrobat’s body became stunted by this training; a “number must become diseased or crippled under the process.” The major problem acrobat children posed for evangelicals was that they strayed both from respectable codes of behavior and, more importantly, from religion. Argument overlooked by the peers was that the trade encouraged performers’ self-sufficiency: “[The peers] may have a feeling for the little ones,” said one acrobat on the eve of the bill’s passage, but the performers’ honest living “saves them from crime or the workhouse.” The child acrobat continued to draw the attention of the public and legislators alike, especially since, in the words of Shaftesbury in 1883, the provisions of the act were being “altogether ignored” and “at this time the evil prevailed to a greater extent than it ever did before.”.
The development of the acrobat’s body became stunted by this training; a “number must become diseased or crippled under the process.” The major problem acrobat children posed for evangelicals was that they strayed both from respectable codes of behavior and, more importantly, from religion. Argument overlooked by the peers was that the trade encouraged performers’ self-sufficiency: “[The peers] may have a feeling for the little ones,” said one ...


Cote : 791.301 T135r 2016

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2005 [1]

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