Performing Modernity: Culture and Experiment in the Irish Free State
By (Author) Elaine Sisson
Series edited by Bruce McConachie
Series edited by Claire Cochrane
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
22nd January 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
History of art
Popular culture
Theatre studies
Hardback
304
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
An exploration of modernism's influence on the bohemian and counter-cultural movements in theatre, popular culture and design in the post-independent Irish Free State.
Were there flappers in Ireland Was there really a Cabaret Club in Dublin in 1926 Using photographs, theatre and costume designs, letters, newspaper accounts, novels and other historical sources this book explores an Irish Free State where people go to jazz clubs, read film magazines, watch German Expressionist theatre, are interested in Soviet design, and attend fancy dress balls dressed up as their favourite Irish products.
Exploring modernisms influence on theatre, writing, design, art and film, as well as the importance of modernity in defining social identity, technology, urban life, fashion, reading, advertising and popular culture, Performing Modernity offers a wholly new perspective on life in the Irish Free State.
The early years of Irish independence are often characterised as impoverished and traumatic as the country recovered from the effects of a world war, a revolution and a civil war. This book argues that there was also ambition and optimism among the citizens of the new State as they embraced the promise of modernity and bohemian European ideas in theatre, film, and popular culture during the 1920s and 1930s.
Elaine Sisson is Senior Lecturer in Visual Culture in the Faculty of Film, Art and Creative Technologies at the Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Dublin, Ireland. Her publications include Ireland, Design and Visual Culture: Negotiating Modernity 1922-1992, edited with L. King (2007) and Pearses Patriots: The Cult of Boyhood at St. Endas (2005).