Judith Flanders's Blog
November 4, 2019
Working on Assassin’s Creed
Judith Flanders has never played video games – not even Angry Birds – so no one was more surprised than the historian herself when she was approached by the developers of the Assassin’s Creed franchise to serve as a consultant on the latest instalment, set on the streets of 19th-century London amid the Industrial Revolution.
“It’s like you’re an expert on a faraway place,” said Flanders. “You’ve learnt the language. You’ve met people from there. You’ve read every single book that was ever written. Now,...
April 1, 2015
Stuff vs. Theory
In a rather acid moment, my publisher once said that all my books could secretly be titled Fun Stuff I Have Found Out. He did not mean it unkindly, or at least I tell myself he didn’t. And up to a point it’s a fair cop, guv. I came to history-writing by the back door. I was writing a biography of four Victorian women, and to understand their own particular lives I felt I needed to know more about the lives which most women of their background and time
lived. My next four books, to a greater o...
September 11, 2014
‘Stuff vs. Theory': Types of history-writing
‘Everybody Dies': bodies in art
April 24, 2014
Wheeldon: Winter’s Tale, ENB: Lest They Forget, BRB: Pagodas
Choreography may be the most difficult of all performing-art forms. The dance-lover is all too aware that the standard theatre or opera repertoires contain thousands of works. Dance, by contrast, has a repertoire that numbers only in the hundreds, and most companies commonly draw on only dozens of works.
For England’s three largest ballet companies to produce new pieces within months of each other, therefore, is unusual. That the works come from four of the most artistically acclaimed choreogr...
March 21, 2014
Jack the Ripper, review
Paul Begg and John Bennett: Jack the Ripper: The Forgotten Victims (Yale University Press, 310 pp.)
Of making of books about Jack the Ripper, there is apparently no end. While the murders were a press sensation in 1888, ‘Ripperology’ as a subject did not take off until the 1960s, when increasingly obscure or exalted subjects were put forward as suspects, from poor Polish lunatics and Russian conmen, through the Duke of Clarence to the painter Walter Sickert and even the author of Alice in Wond...
March 19, 2014
Richard Hamilton
RICHARD HAMILTON, Tate Modern
RICHARD HAMILTON AT THE ICA
RICHARD HAMILTON: Word and Image: Prints 1963–2007, Alan Cristea Gallery
Mark Godfrey Paul Schimmel and Vicente Todoli, editors, RICHARD HAMILTON (352pp. Tate. £29.99)
Jonathan Jones, RICHARD HAMILTON: Word and Image: Prints 1963–2007 (155pp. Alan Cristea Gallery. £25)
Richard Hamilton was a relative unknown when in 1956 he produced the collage for which he is still, perhaps, most famous: “Just what is it that makes today’s homes so differe...
February 26, 2014
Modernism and Dance
Susan Jones: Literature, Modernism and Dance (360pp. Oxford University Press. £55)
In 1930s literary London, ballet was everywhere. Virginia Woolf, several Stracheys, the Bells, E. M. Forster, H. G. Wells, John Middleton Murry and Katherine Mansfield, Aldous Huxley, the Sitwells and T. S. Eliot all attended the Ballets Russes. Louis MacNeice’s Les Sylphides appeared in 1939, and in the same year Henry Green’s Party Going used the same ballet as a structural underpinning. It wasn’t just the int...
February 13, 2014
‘Everybody Dies’: bodies in art
Sam Mendes’s current production of King Lear at the National, starring Simon Russell Beale, is fascinating in many ways, perhaps the most notable being the ramping up of the body-count of this bloody play. In most stagings, the Fool disappears, his death referenced in a passing sigh, “my poor Fool is hanged”; at the National, he is beaten to death in front of us. Goneril and Regan, too, both die onstage, contrary to the stage directions, as does Gloucester, whose heart “bursts smilingly”. Add...
February 12, 2014
Royal Ballet: Triple Bill
It is possible to see Gloria, Kenneth MacMillan’s howl of rage at the wanton waste of the First World War, as the final piece in a great arc of expressionist dance, from Vaslav Nijinsky’s Le Sacre du Printemps (1913), through Bronislava Nijinska’s Les Noces (1923), to Gloria (1980). The first two works portray a mythicized peasant life, where women are ritually sacrificed for the benefit of the community. The violence they depict, overt in Le Sacre, sublimated into ceremonial in Les Noces, is...