Trickle down effect: the 1911/1912 Abbey Theatre tour of America and its impact on early African American theatre
View/ Open
Date
27/11/2017Item status
Restricted AccessEmbargo end date
27/11/2018Author
Devlin, Luke
Metadata
Abstract
This thesis will examine the direct and indirect impact the Irish National theatre had upon
American theatre in general and the African American theatre in particular. It discusses the
relationship between the Irish theatrical movement during the Irish Literary Renaissance and
the drama that was produced during the Harlem Renaissance. To do this Rorty’s concepts of
the ‘strong poet’ and ‘ironist’ will be utilized. The bleeding and cross contamination of culture,
it is contended, was due to the American tour that the Irish Players undertook in 1911/12. The
tour, although staged in white theatre houses and attended by a mainly white audience, had a
sizeable impact on the American theatrical landscape. This thesis will chart the course of this
change, from the tour through to the beginnings of the Harlem Renaissance. From the Abbey
Theatre to the Little Theatre movement and from there to the African American theatre a
continuous thread of de-reification, of cultural awakenings is established. In essence, the
source of the African American theatre, both the Artistic stylings and hopes of Alain Locke
and the propaganda aspirations of W.E.B. DuBois will be referred back to the Irish tour.