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Pastiche and Prejudice

Arthur Bingham Walkley was an exceedingly popular critic, working as a drama critic at The Times alone for no less than 26 years, and writing for several other newspapers and privately besides that. This book of pastiches was completed after he already had more than two decades of work as a theatre critic under his belt, and it draws some brilliant characterisations. Among the literary and historical figures found in the different pastiches are such illustrious figures as Aristotle and Shakespeare, but also more modern phenomena as movies are discussed, along with politicians and other famous persons of the time. - Summary by Carolin (8 hr 9 min)

Chapters

Pastiche

An Aristotelian Fragment

Mr. Shakespeare Disorderly

Sir Roger at the Russian Ballet

Partridge at 'Julius Caesar'

Dr. Johnson at the Stadium

My Uncle Toby Puzzled

Lady Catherine and Mr. Collins

Mr. Pickwick at the Play

Mr. Crichton and Mr. Littimer

Henry James Repudiates 'The Reprobate'

M. Bergeret on Film Censoring

The Chocolate Drama

Grock

The Function of Criticism

Coterie Criticism

Criticism and Creation

Acting and Criticism

Acting as Art

Audiences

First Nights

Plays within Plays

Plays of Talk

'The Beggar's Opera'

Grand Guignolism

A Theatrical Forecast

A Theory of Brunetière

Disraeli and the Play

Henry James and the Theatre

Theatrical Amorism

H.B. Irving

The Puppets

Vicissitudes of Classics

Perverted Reputations

The Secret of Greek Art

A Point of Croce's

William Hazlitt

Talk at the Martello Tower

Again at the Martello Tower

The Silent Stage

The Movies

Time and the Film

Futurist Dancing

Hroswitha

Pagello

Stendhal

Jules Lemaître

Jane Austen

T.W. Robertson

Versatility

Women's Journals

Practical Literature

Nineteenth-Century Woman

Pickles and Picards

The Business Man