The Multiple Lives of Billy Waters: Dangerous Theatricality and Networked Illustrations in Nineteenth-Century Popular Culture

Mary L. Shannon
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Billy Waters (c. 1780–1823), the ‘King of the Beggars’, was a London street-performer and a well-known figure in early nineteenth-century popular culture, yet despite this he has received no sustained critical or cultural attention. Close attention to depictions of Waters offers the potential for developing a new model of 1820s and 1830s popular culture that shows – in more detail than the critical models currently available – how popular theatre connects with print and visual media. The use and reuse of Waters’ image allows us to see how Regency popular culture had a specific kind of matrix in which characters, scenes, and images were used and reused across media: with Waters as a case study we can track the ways in which representations of theatricality as a mode of urban life spread across popular culture in a series of networked illustrations. This article analyses visual and textual representations of Billy Waters to suggest a new approach to ascertaining the relationship between ideological agency and popular cultural forms. Building on Robert Darnton’s more linear ‘communication circuit’ it proposes the model of the ‘communication network’ to give new insight into the ways in which theatre and its visual culture function across Regency popular forms.
比利·沃特斯的多重生活:19世纪流行文化中的危险戏剧性和网络化插图
比利·沃特斯(约1780-1823),被称为“乞丐之王”,是伦敦街头表演者,也是19世纪早期流行文化中的知名人物,然而尽管如此,他并没有得到持续的批评或文化关注。密切关注对沃特斯的描绘提供了发展19世纪20年代和19世纪30年代流行文化的新模型的潜力,该模型比目前可用的关键模型更详细地展示了流行戏剧与印刷和视觉媒体的联系。沃特斯图像的使用和再利用让我们看到摄政时期的流行文化是如何形成一种特定的矩阵的,在这种矩阵中,人物、场景和图像在媒体上被使用和再利用:以沃特斯为例,我们可以通过一系列网络插图来追踪戏剧作为城市生活模式在流行文化中传播的方式。本文通过对比利·沃特斯的视觉表现和文本表现的分析,提出了一种确定意识形态代理与大众文化形式之间关系的新途径。在Robert Darnton更为线性的“通信电路”的基础上,它提出了“通信网络”的模型,为戏剧及其视觉文化在摄政时期流行形式中的作用方式提供了新的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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