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In the belly of the beast: The itinerant British showman and the definition of ‘seer performance’

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posted on 2025-08-01, 08:48 authored by T Lidington
This article explores the potential for embodied performance practice to interrogate contemporary social relations in public space and time: this is particularly pertinent as the public realm becomes increasingly controlled and defined. It is my assertion that there is a mode of itinerant showman performance which uses historical tropes of popular entertainment in fabric, form and text, operating in unstratified public spaces, to deliver radical commentary upon contemporary socio-economic circumstances: this I have coined ‘Seer Performance’. The performativity of itinerant British showmen has evaded cultural analysis for centuries, but in this article I examine how this style of delivery can provide contemporary opportunities to challenge the hegemonic orthodoxy of the streets. Seer performance occupies a liminal space between heritage performance and contemporary practice and is demonstrated by my research into the historical practice of fairground sideshows, flea circuses and peepshows, combined with my autoethnographic performance. Seer performance is not a new form, but rather a new term through which to understand a performance function that has existed as long as there has been storytelling and showmanship. Tony Lidington is a scholar-practitioner associated with the Department of Drama, University of Exeter.

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© 2017 The Author. Open access

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open accessfrom the University of Newcastle, Australia via the link in this record

Journal

Popular Entertainment Studies

Publisher

University of Newcastle, Australia

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2020-02-12T13:28:12Z

FOA date

2020-02-12T13:29:18Z

Citation

Vol. 8 (1), pp. 36 - 56

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  • Archive

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