Personal profile
Biography
Pronouns: she/her
Email: quirkc [at] edgehill [dot] ac [dot] uk
I’m a Canadian-born scholar-practitioner with a keen interest in recognising voices that have historically been silenced, hidden, and marginalised, particularly those of women. In my research, teaching, and practice, I interrogate the histories, practices, and structures which have led to these voices being obscured. As a theatre historian, I’m particularly interested in encouraging the study of history and historical practices as a useful scaffolding for creative work.
I completed my PhD at McGill University, before teaching Theatre History at Concordia University, both in Montréal, Canada. My dissertation, “Self-Making: Acts of Performance in the Victorian Novel”, analysed autobiographical writings of nineteenth-century women actors alongside a range of novels from the period to argue that throughout the nineteenth century women self-consciously separate their performing and performed selves. Both on stage and in fiction, this practice allows for the creation of a sustained public identity while preserving the privacy of the self.
The theoretical framework of this research forms the basis of my current book project, Writing Performance: Actress Memoir and Performance Theory, 1830-2016, which considers the narrativization of performance theory in women actors’ autobiographical writings from the nineteenth century through the present. My research and practice also consider the affordances of alternative performance spaces, particularly those offered by VR and various social media platforms. I’m currently working on creative projects for Twitter and VR spaces, and am co-editing with Dr. Carolyn Ownbey (Golden Gate University) a collection on play in the time of Covid, and what the adaptations necessitated by the pandemic suggest about the futures of a variety of art and entertainment fields.
Research interests
The long nineteenth century; theatre histories; digital, online, social media, multimedia, intermedial and XR performance; performance theory; intersections between literature and theatre; women’s writing and performance
Research Groups
- EHU Nineteen Research Group
Fingerprint
- 1 Similar Profiles
Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
Research output
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Interruptive Activism: Nineteenth-Century Theatre and Political Campaigning
Vargo, G. & Quirk, C., 31 May 2025, Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film, 52, 1, p. 3-11 9 p.Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article (specialist)
Open AccessFile6 Downloads (Pure) -
Pandemic Play: Community in Performance, Gaming, and the Arts
Ownbey, C. & QUIRK, C., 21 May 2024, Palgrave Macmillan. 259 p.Research output: Book/Report › Anthology › peer-review
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Emilia as Witness, Witnessing Emilia
QUIRK, C., 30 Dec 2022, Notelets of Filth: A Companion Reader to Morgan Lloyd Malcolm’s Emilia. Kressly, L., Patient, A. & Williams, K. A. (eds.). Routledge, 13 p.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
Open AccessFile105 Downloads (Pure) -
'It’s only a play’: Wife (2019), A Doll’s House (1879), and the Relevance of Historical Theatre
QUIRK, C., 30 Nov 2022, Comparative Drama, 56, 3, p. 231-255 26 p.Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article (specialist)
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Hannah Lynch (1859-1904): Irish Writer, Cosmopolitan, New Woman. By Faith Binckes and Kathryn Laing
QUIRK, C., 2021, The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies, 43, p. 234-236.Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Book/Film/Article review
Activities
- 1 Invited talk
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“I was stabbed at the Adelphi Theatre. I cannot rest.”: Nineteenth-Century Theatre Ghosts
QUIRK, C. (Speaker)
3 Nov 2021Activity: Dissemination › Invited talk