'You have discovered a perishable treasure, and it is imperative
to share it with other people before it fades... You have only one
chance to get it right, while the impression is still fresh...'
If critics often disagree among themselves over the merits of a
given work, this is nothing compared to the wider argument about
what the critic's role should be - Objective judge? Consumer guide?
Provocateur? - and whether or not those practising criticism are
living up to their duty to the 'perishable treasures' on which they pronounce.
In Theatre Criticism, first published in 1992, Irving
Wardle sets out to define the credentials and aims of this vexed
profession. Tracing its origins to Dryden and the Grub Street
writers of Georgian London, Wardle goes on to examine the
prejudices, questions and practices of modern reviewing, drawing on
three decades' worth of his own experience.