Victorian Studies
Volume 44, Number 2, Winter 2002
E-ISSN: 1527-2052 Print ISSN: 0042-5222
DOI: 10.1353/vic.2002.0040
E-ISSN: 1527-2052 Print ISSN: 0042-5222
DOI: 10.1353/vic.2002.0040
Voskuil, Lynn M.
Feeling Public: Sensation Theater, Commodity Culture, and the Victorian Public Sphere
Victorian Studies - Volume 44, Number 2, Winter 2002, pp. 245-274
Indiana University Press
Lynn M. Voskuil - Feeling Public: Sensation Theater, Commodity Culture,
and the Victorian Public Sphere - Victorian Studies 44:2 Victorian
Studies 44.2 (2002) 245-274 Feeling Public:
Sensation Theater, Commodity Culture, and the Victorian Public Sphere
Lynn M. Voskuil University of Houston In January 1863, The Trial of
Effie Deans; Or, The Heart of Midlothian opened at the Westminster
Theatre in London's West End and became an immediate critical success
and box-office hit. Written by Dion Boucicault, the premier "sensation
playwright" of the "sensational" 1860s, Effie Deans was an adaptation
of Walter Scott's novel and featured several "sensation scenes,"
including a representation of Effie's trial that captivated audiences
and reviewers with its air of authenticity. "Mr. Boucicault has aimed
at a literal copy of a judicial proceeding so close to the legal
practice," noted the Illustrated London News (ILN), "that the spectator
feels as if present at an actual trial." Sensation dramas like Effie
Deans were all the rage in 1860s London, attracting vast crowds that
marveled at tumbling waterfalls, speeding trains, and burning ships.
What most astonished audiences, though, was neither the sheer showiness
of such stage effects nor the increasingly sophisticated technology
that made them possible. Instead, playgoers were amazed because
sensation scenes seemed so real; they grew excited because they could
feel as if they were really there. And they saw...