Introduction
Historical and cultural contexts
Scene analysis
Critical reception
List of key productions
Works Cited
Revolt. She said. Revolt again
Notes
In this play, Alice Birch examines the language, behaviour, and forces that shape women in the 21st century through a study of social power structures. It is published here as a Student Edition with commentary and notes by Marissia Fragkou.
Alice Birch has written for the Royal Court Theatre, BBC
Radio 4, Old Vic, Comédie de Valence, Almeida Festival, Clean
Break, Schaubühne and RSC. She has been on attachment to the
National Theatre Studio, Royal Court Theatre, Paines Plough and
Channel 4. Her play Many Moons was shortlisted for the Susan Smith
Blackburn Award and she was winner of the George Devine Award for
Most Promising New Playwright in 2014.
Marissia Fragkou is Senior Lecturer in Performing Arts and
joined Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. She has published
and presented papers on contemporary British and European theatre
and performance, as well as performance and cultural politics,
ethics of responsibility and radical democratic politics.
Alice Birch doesn’t want this work to be unseen. Her angry and
frantic play Revolt. She aaid. Revolt again is an experimental work
focused on using a feminist voice which is loud; a feminist voice
which seeks to change the world not through small increments but
through a revolution: through the destruction of language; through
the destruction of society...
*Guardian*
Ms. Birch’s play, which became a hit for the Royal Shakespeare
Company in 2014, has a way of making you question everything you
say when it comes to discussing women and their relationships with
men, one another and a world in a state of unending upheaval...
Linguistic confusion plagues the frantic souls portrayed... Even
the play’s title, with its use of periods instead of commas,
suggests the difficulty of getting words out and how inadequate
they seem when you do... Yet Revolt teems with the same anarchic
fury that possessed Jimmy Porter [in Look Back in Anger] and the
same frustrated awareness that there are no easy fixes for an
unsatisfactory social system... Instead, Ms. Birch is articulating
the alternatives that come to women’s minds in dealing with how
they are dealt with — as objects of love and lust, as employees and
employers, as mothers and daughters.
*New York Times*
Acts One to Three are dialogues. Issues of gender language change
into material questions of marriage, of women in capitalism, women
raped and colonised, women desperate for refusal of the roles
imposed on them. By Act Four, everything is deconstructed and there
isn’t dialogue anymore... We witness conversations, haunting solo
performances, disturbing statements about or directed to women, and
a lack of genuine solutions provided in a system that benefits from
oppression... In many ways, this play is a call to arms. It exposes
the contradictions in simply refusing sexism in words, which is
promoted as “revolutionary” by the very agents of the status
quo.
*Diva Mag*
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