- Wed Oct 13, 2021 2:31 pm
#11773
As I've said before, it's not as if the target audience in all these Proms/National Trust/Shakespeare furores are avid consumers of those particular brands of culture. I don't mean to be snobby, but does anyone think that some thick as shit Sun reader is going to spend their Sundays dragging their kids round an art gallery? Or taking them to the theatre to enjoy Measure for Measure?
It seems to be about pushing a certain brand of culture - one that's rooted in 'heritage', a simplified and whitewashed view of the past. One in which everyone was proud to be British, or envious of us, and rightly so because we were not only best at wars but weren't beastly like the foreigners were to the natives and could write plays and shit.
And that's the thing - anyone with even a passing familiarity with Shakespeare would tell you that colour and gender blind casting, time shifts, and so on are nothing new. In fact they're what sets him apart because he doesn't put in character descriptions or detailed set layouts. Read one of his plays. It's dialogue, and a few enters and exits. Everything else is up to the director and cast. Or the Proms - they've been awash with EU flags and foreign musicians for years too. Yes, they sing Rule Britannia, but almost in a tongue in cheek way. It's an expression of patriotism for sure, but in an outgoing and upbeat (and inclusive) way.
In the end, people are fed an image of how things should be, and get upset when they realise things aren't that simple. But rather than investigate the complexity, it's easier to just whinge.
As the actress said to the bishop, rabbi, imam and priest
"My eyes have seen the glory, I'm a born again Atheist!"