
Contents
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The Wicked Stage Transformed The Wicked Stage Transformed
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Action and Acting Action and Acting
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Performance and Freedom Performance and Freedom
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Rights vs. Obligations Rights vs. Obligations
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter traces the birth and development of theatrical liberalism in early twentieth-century America. It examines in detail its major ideological and dramaturgical features in a wide variety of films, plays, and other popular entertainment of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s and beyond. Theatrical liberalism combined salient features of Protestantism, liberalism, Judaic rituals and attitudes, and the inherent theatricality of a nation in formation. Characterized by a revolutionary embrace of theatricality as a viable social mode, the prioritizing of external action over internal intention, the celebration of self-fashioning as a uniquely American form of freedom, and the construction of a theatrical community based on obligation rather than rights, theatrical liberalism emerged as the hybrid expression of a modern liberal and Jewish worldview.
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