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Anna Reading

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Professor
Anna Reading
PhD
CitizenshipUnited Kingdom
Alma materUniversity of York
Occupations
  • Author
  • Playwright
  • Academic
EmployerKing's College London[1]
Notable work
  • Autistic Dreaming
  • Gender and Memory in the Globital Age
  • Save As...Digital Memories
  • The Social Inheritance of the Holocaust, Gender Culture and Memory
  • Polish Women, Solidarity and Feminism
[2]
WebsiteOfficial website

Anna Reading (born 1965) is a British author, playwright and academic specialising in gender and cultural memory studies.

Education and early life

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Reading was born in the Midlands, UK[3] and was educated at a comprehensive school in Camberley, Surrey.[4][5] She gained a first in English literature and Politics, and an MA in Women's Studies from the University of York. During her studies, Reading co-founded a rape crisis group in York .[6] She was a peace protestor at Greenham Common women's peace camp in the 1980s.[7] [8]Post-graduation she lectured in English literature and language at Poland's University of Łódź for one year.[9][10] She wrote plays and journalism before working as a researcher on East European media change.[11] Reading completed her PhD thesis, Socially inherited memory, gender and the public sphere in Poland, at the University of Westminster School of Media, Arts and Design in 1996.[12]

Career

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Academic

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Reading is professor of culture and creative industries at King's College London. She teaches and researches gender and cultural memory with an intersectional feminist approach.[13] She was Head of King's Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries 2013-17 and Director of King's Arts and Humanities Research Institute 2018-22.[13] She held senior academic positions at London South Bank University and Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia. [14][1][15] She is professorial research associate at the University of Glasgow.[16] She is joint managing editor of the journal Media, Culture and Society. [17]

Reading's scholarly publications are cited by scholars in comparative literature, gender studies, holocaust studies, heritage studies, memory studies, and media studies, with growing interest within environmental studies and disability studies.[18][19] In an interview with The Guardian she analyses the significance of citizen journalism and the camera phone in the witnessing of the 2005 London Bombings. [20] She reflects on singing and women's activism research for the BBC's Choral History of Britain.[8] In an interview with ABC Reading explains how digital technologies and globally networked memory or 'globital memory' is changing human responses to death and grief.[21]

Theatre

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Reading co-founded the feminist collective Strip Search Theatre in 1987, writing and directing plays that expose injustice and inequalities. [6] Her plays are part of the British drama movement 'In yer face theatre'.[22] Christina Ward suggests that Reading's plays fall within Anglophone 'trauma drama'.[23] Anne Rüggemeier notes, however, that Reading's plays and productions operate at multiple levels with 'the collective transformation of symbolic, spiritual and emotional capital between the cast and audience' with theatre contributing to a 'restitutional assemblage'. [24]

Kiss Punch Goodnight

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Reading's Kiss Punch Goodnight was performed by Strip Search Theatre in 1987.[25] The play, which tells the story of an incest survivor, is described by Mary Remnant in Methuen's Plays for Women as 'Explicit, harrowing and shocking' adding 'the play pulls no punches in its premise that power and not love or sexual desire underlies child sexual abuse.'[26] Kiss Punch Goodnight previewed in York[27] before appearing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.[28][29] The Scotsman notes, 'The horror of the atrocities against childhood in this innocent-looking prison emerge cogently and movingly into their awful legacy in the adult woman. Despite that this is not male-battering play but a positive and illuminating exploration of dark corner.' [30]

Want

During the East European revolutions of 1989 and inspired by feminism in Poland Reading wrote Want, drawing on life-histories she conducted with Polish women.[31] Strip Search Theatre performed Want in six Polish cities and six cities in the UK and Ireland.[32] Want dramatises Polish women's history and revolutionary struggles as they wait for rationed food, splicing naturalism with surrealist techniques and distancing effects. [33][34]

Hard Core

In 1990 Reading's Hard Core, commisioned by Cardiff's WOT Theatre and directed by Jeremy James, [35] was produced at the Sherman Theatre, Cardiff and in London.[36] In the Western Mail Reading said the play was a response to an interview she conducted with a shop owner who sold firearms and pornography together. The play is set during the fall of the Roman Empire and explores totalitarianism, class and sexual decadence.[10]

Grandmas Garden and The Stoning

In 1991 Reading wrote Grandma's Garden and The Stoning. The idea for The Stoning springs from a news report of a woman who during her trial superglued her lips together. Set in an open prison, The Stoning explores poverty, crime, and incarceration.[37] Its sister play, Grandma's Garden, is a fairytale set in the 'unfenced mind' of Beatie, 71, who runs away from an abusive care home with her lover Lottie. [38] Strip Search Theatre toured the UK with performances at York Arts Centre and at London's Ovalhouse.[38]

Falling

Falling dramatises the story of a runaway mixed-race fifteen-year-old girl, Ket, who is groomed by an older white man. Ket escapes to discover sanctuary and resilience with her Caribbean grandmother. The play was performed in 1996 at the Bird's Nest, London. Theatre critic Aleks Sierz describes Falling as capturing 'unbearable pain' summed up in the image of Ket 'trying to remove a tampon after she is raped.' [22] Siertz states that Falling iillustrates how the 1990s shift by British playwrights to shock audiences with 'distressing truths' was found across the UK theatre landscape not only the stages of Edinburgh's Traverse Theatre and London's Royal Court. [22]

To My Dearest Daughter

Fuel Theatre commissioned Reading's To my dearest daughter for Phenomenal People. A digital theatre event celebrating women's lives, [39] it was first performed at the UK's Calm Down, Dear festival. The play is a monologue in the form of a mother's letter to her seven year old daughter.[40] It was also part of King's 2015 festival Fabrication with the script published in Gender and Memory in the Globital Age.[41]

Filmmaker and writer Vincent O'Connell directed a reading of RP35, about a sculptor's obsessive collecting, at Southwark Theatre. O'Connell later directed a rehearsed reading of Cacti Hearts the first part of a trilogy 'Pre-Occupations' set in the Middle East, at London's Edric Theatre, also performed in Tromso, Norway.[42] InThe Unkind, inspired by Nikolaus Geyrhater' s film Homo Sapiens, Reading writes dialogue in a future language beyond climate change, drone warfare and fascism. The Unkind was performed at London's Oval House Theatre as part of a International Women's Day celebration.

BOOKS

Polish Women, Solidarity and Feminism

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Reading's Polish Women Solidarity and Feminism [43] examines the impact on women's lives of the revolutions in Eastern Europe.The book analyses how sexism in Polish culture is constructed in language, history, memory and social policies by the communist state and in the Polish trade uniion movement Solidarity. The book provides a detailed account of Polish feminist history and emergent feminist groups after 1989, providing a sense of hope.[44] Peggy Watson argues that the book's interviews with Polish women 'puncture the systematic silence which has existed around gender issues'.[45]

The Social Inheritance of the Holocaust: Gender Culture and Memory

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Reading's The Social Inheritance of the Holocaust challenges Geoffrey Hartman's assumption that the Nazi Holocaust was gender-neutral. Reading argues that 'both the event itself and its subsequent memory are gendered.' [46] Focussing on Jewish and Romani Holocaust victims and survivors, Reading shows how the Holocaust's intersectional gendered impacts are culturally articulated and remembered by young people in Poland, the UK and US from Holocaust historiography, at sites of genocidal atrocity, in museums, autobiographies and films.[47] Reading argues that including an understanding of gender enables a more complex understanding of the path to genocide and to undertanding how memories of the holocaust are handed down.[47]

Save As...Digital Memories

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Save As...Digital Memories develops the concept of digital memory and examines how digital technologies are changing how people remember and mediate history and memory.[48] Case studies explore mnemonic practices related to online memorials, blogs, social networking sites, digital archives and virtual museums with foci on the war on terror, cyberpunk, and the Holocaust. Reading's contribution examines the ways in which mobile phones are changing human memory forms and practices.[48]

Cultural Memories of Nonviolent Struggles

The book examines cultural memories of peace and non-violent struggles through movements that include Mahatma Gandhi's Salt March, the Suffragette movement, Poland's Solidarity, Aboriginal people's cultural restitution, The Second Intifada, anti-war museums and independent video games. Reading examines singing and the reworking of peace songs at Greenham Common.[49] A review by Rachel Julian argues that the book demonstrates the importance of cultural memory for future non-violent success. [49]

Gender and Memory in the Globital Age

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The book examines how digital and connective media technologies and globalisation combine unevenly to form new kinds of gendered memory assemblages and trajectories.[50]Reading contends that from before birth, through natal imaging, until after death, through digital memorials, human lives are now mnemonically configured in the 'globital memory' field. [51] The book influenced a reorientation in memory studies towards digital technologies and digital memory. [52]

The Right to Memory

The Right to Memory explores the arguments for a 'just memory culture': In an interview, Reading said individuals and communities have the right to make public stories about the past 'in their own way'. [53] She develops a typology of memory rights already found in international laws, including legal protections for indigenous peoples. In the face of extinction events and climate change Reading makes the case for integrating non-human and more-than-human memory rights.[54]

Autistic Dreaming

Autistic Dreaming demonstrates how autistic people's cultural activism 'functions as a crucial repository for embodied knowledge'.[55] The book draws on critical disability studies and neuroqueer theory to neuroqueer to memory studies. The research examines speaking and non-speaking autistic people's life writing, websites, films and art work from around the world. The book highlights particular 'characteristics of autistic memory such as heightened sensory experiences, deep ecological connection and interactions with objects, environments and energies'.[55]

Publications

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Books

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Author(s) Year Title Location Publisher
Reading, Anna 2025 Autistic Dreaming: Vibrant Memory, Activism and Environment New York Berghahn
Tirosh, Noam and Reading, Anna (eds) 2023 A Right to Memory: History, Media, Law, Ethics New York Berghahn
Reading, Anna 2016 Gender and Memory in the Globital Age London Palgrave Macmillan
Reading, Anna and Katriel, Tamar (eds) 2015 Cultural Memories of Nonviolent Struggle: Powerful Times London Palgrave Macmillan
Garde-Hansen, Joanne, Hoskins, Andrew and Reading, Anna (eds) 2009 Save As...Digital Memories London Palgrave Macmillan
Reading, Anna 2002 The Social Inheritance of the Holocaust: Gender, Culture and Memory London Palgrave Macmillan
Stokes, Jane and Reading, Anna (eds) 1999 Media in Britain: Current Debates and Developments London Macmillan
Sparks, Colin with Anna Reading 1998 Communism, Capitalism and the Mass Media London Sage
Reading, Anna 1992 Polish Women, Solidarity and Feminism London Macmillan

Plays

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  • Kiss Punch Goodnight (1987)
  • Want (1990)
  • Hard Core (1990)
  • Grandma's Garden (1991)
  • The Stoning (1991)
  • Falling (1996)
  • RP35 (2004)
  • Cacti Hearts (2009)
  • Letter to My Daughter (2014)
  • The Unkind (2022)

References

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  1. ^ a b "Professor of Culture and Creative Industries, Director of the AHRI". King's College London. 21 January 2020. Retrieved 2023-05-16.
  2. ^ Anna Reading in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  3. ^ Solomons, Justine (2023-03-20). "Byte Connects:Laetitia Rutherford and Anna Reading". Byte the Book. Retrieved 2026-04-10.
  4. ^ "Discord over charity quartet". Camberley News. 6 February 1981. pp. Frontpage. 1.
  5. ^ "Growing up brings its problems". Camberley News. Camberley, Surrey, England.: Reach PLC. 22 July 1980. p. 3.
  6. ^ a b Greenfield, Margaret (1987-08-19). "Domestic Drama". The Yorkshire Post. pp. 6–7.
  7. ^ Julian, Rachel (February 1, 2016). "Book review Anna Reading and Tamar Katriel, Cultural Memories of Nonviolent Struggles: Powerful Times". Peace News (published 1 February 2016). Retrieved 7 April 2026.
  8. ^ a b Williams, Roderick (2017-09-20). "Singing for Solidarity". BBC Radio 4 Choral History of Britain Series 1. Retrieved 2026-04-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ Greenfield, Margaret (1989-12-27). "Feminist Poles Apart". Yorkshire Post. pp. 2–3.
  10. ^ a b Socher, Nicole (1990-11-23). "Sex, guns and Polish politics". Western Mail (Wales). p. 23.
  11. ^ Mwakikoti, Alex L (Winter 1999). "Book Reviews Communism, Capitalism and the Mass Media by Colin Sparks with Anna Reading". Southern Communication Journal. 64 (2): 176 – via Taylor and Francis on-line.
  12. ^ Reading, Anna (1996). Socially inherited memory, gender and the public sphere in Poland (PhD thesis). University of Westminster.
  13. ^ a b "King's People, Professor Anna Reading". King's College, London. Retrieved 2026-04-09.
  14. ^ "Professor Anna Reading". Western Sydney University. April 2024. Archived from the original on 2023-10-02. Retrieved 8 April 2026.
  15. ^ "Anna Reading About: Bio". Writers Guild of Great Britain. March 2026. Retrieved 7 April 2026.
  16. ^ "Centre for Cultural Policy Research: Professor Anna Reading". University of Glasgow. 2026-04-10. Retrieved 2026-04-10.
  17. ^ "Media Culture and Society Editorial Board". Sage Publications. Retrieved 2026-04-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  18. ^ "Anna Reading, Professor of Media and Memory Studies, Cited by". Google Scholar Citations Index. 2026-04-10. Retrieved 2026-04-10.
  19. ^ "King's People, Professor Anna Reading,". King's College, London. 2026-04-10. Retrieved 2026-04-10.
  20. ^ Jeffries, Stuart (2010-01-08). "The Rise of the Camera-Phone". The Guardian. Retrieved 2026-04-21.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  21. ^ Funnell, Anthony; Zsivanovits, Karin (2017-03-04). "Witnessing, death and memory". Future Tense. ABC National Radio. pp. 11.30 pm. Retrieved 2026-04-21.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  22. ^ a b c Sierz, Aleks (2001). In-yer-face theatre: British drama today. London: Faber and Faber. p. 233. ISBN 0-571-20049-4. OCLC 894611979.
  23. ^ Wald, Christina (2007). Hysteria, Trauma and Melancholia: Performative Maladies in Contemporary Anglophone Drama. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. Note 10. 242. ISBN 978-0-230-54712-4.
  24. ^ Rüggemeier, Anne (2018-12-12). "'All one can do is tell a better story' - The Ethical Potential and the Risks of Storytelling". Diegesis. 7 (2).
  25. ^ Kennedy, Flloyd (1987-09-10). "Review of Kiss Punch Goodnight at the Edinburgh Fringe". The Stage and Television Today. p. 10.
  26. ^ Remnant, Mary (1988). Plays for Women. Vol. 7. Methuen. p. 9. ISBN 978 0413174901.
  27. ^ "York gets incest play preview". Yorkshire Evening Press. 1987-08-12. p. 8.
  28. ^ Christodoulou, Aileen (1987). "Events to Look out For: Plays About Child Abuse. Kiss Punch Goodnight. Strip Search Theatre". Spare Rib. 181 (August): 8 – via Print.
  29. ^ Greenfield, Margaret (1987-08-19). "Domestic Drama". The Yorkshire Post. pp. 7–8.
  30. ^ Campbell, David (1987-08-27). "Around the Fringe". The Scotsman. p. 11.
  31. ^ W, B. "Arts and Entertainment. Spring Street Theatre, Hull: Want". Yorkshire Post. p. 6.
  32. ^ Hutchinson, Charles (1989-12-10). "Women with a Polish Mission". Yorkshire Evening Press. p. 10.
  33. ^ Greenfield, Margaret (1989-12-27). "Feminist Poles Apart". Yorkshire Post. pp. 2–3.
  34. ^ Hutchinson, Charles (1989-12-20). "A female cry for freedom". Yorkshire Evening Post. Newsquest Media Group. p. 4.
  35. ^ Morris, Keith (2026-04-01). "Wot Theatre: Past Productions, Theatre in Wales". Theatre in Wales. Retrieved 2026-04-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  36. ^ Adams, David (1990-12-10). "Hard Core". The Guardian. p. 33. Retrieved 2023-05-16.
  37. ^ Hutchinson, Charles (1991-02-08). "Doubling up with Stripsearch". The Yorkshire Evening Press. p. 10.
  38. ^ a b Hutchinson, Charles (1991-02-08). "Doubling up with Strip Search". The Yorkshire Press. p. 10.
  39. ^ Love, Catherine (2014-10-13). "Phenomenal People: Camden's People's Theatre. Telling Different Stories". Exeunt Magazine.
  40. ^ Gregory, Hattie (2014-09-11). "To My Dearest Daughter". Phenomenal People Blog. Archived from the original on 2016-10-22. Retrieved 2026-04-09.
  41. ^ Reading, Anna (2016). Gender and Memory in the Globital Age. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 178-184 and 201-204. ISBN 978-0-230-36864-4.
  42. ^ "Borders in Cacti Hearts University of Tromso, Norway" (PDF). Border Culture Research Group, Anna Reading at UiT. 2026-04-17. Retrieved 2026-04-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  43. ^ Reading, Anna (2014). Polish Women, Solidarity and Feminism. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-12341-4. OCLC 935188799.
  44. ^ Temple, Bogusia (January–February 1995). "Polish Women, Solidarity and Feminism". Women's Studies International Forum. 18 (1): 77. doi:10.1016/0277-5395(95)80002-6. Retrieved 2023-03-04.
  45. ^ Watson, Peggy (Summer 1993). "Reviewed Work: Polish Women, Solidarity and Feminism by Anna Reading". Feminist Review. 44: 118–119. doi:10.1057/fr.1993.28. JSTOR 1395203. S2CID 189906458.
  46. ^ Cole, Tim (November 2003). "Review: The Longest Shadow, The Social Inheritance of the Holocaust". History Today. 53 (11): 82.
  47. ^ a b Fleming, Michael (2006-08-21). "Holocaust and memory". Ethnopolitics. 4 (1): 115–123. doi:10.1080/17449050500072457. ISSN 1744-9057. S2CID 143854425.
  48. ^ a b Allen, Matthew (2011). "Book review: Save As ... Digital Memories. Memory Studies". Memory Studies. 4 (4): 481–484. doi:10.1177/1750698011414087. hdl:2381/27981. S2CID 143562914.
  49. ^ a b Julian, Rachel (2016-02-01). "Anna Reading and Tamar Katriel, Cultural Memories of Nonviolent Struggles:Powerful Times". Peace News. Retrieved 2026-04-22.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  50. ^ Annabell, Taylor (February 2023). "Scrolliing back: Remediation within and through digital memory work" (PDF). Memory, Mind and Media. 2 e10: 2, 3. doi:10.1017/mem.2023.6.
  51. ^ "Review by Cody A. Jackson, Texas Woman's University – Technoculture". Retrieved 2023-05-16.
  52. ^ Trujillo, Janny Amaya; Hernandez, A (2017). "De la memoria colectiva a las nuevas ecologías de la memoria: derroteros en la investigación sobre memoria, medios y tecnologías de la comunicación". Philosophy. S2CID 151853645.
  53. ^ Li, Andong (2025-07-07). "Social justice, the right to memory and communication ethics: Shaping a just memory culture in the digital age — An interview with Anna Reading and Noam Tirosh [社会正义、记忆权与传播伦理:塑造数字时代的公正记忆文化——访媒介记忆学者安娜·瑞丁、诺姆·提罗什]". Chinese Journal of Journalism and Communication [国际新闻界]. 7 (47): 158–176 – via CNKI (China National Knowledge Infrastructure).
  54. ^ Whitehead, Anne (2024-02-07). "Book review: The Right to Memory: History, Media, Law and Ethics Noam Tirosh and Anna Reading (eds)". Memory Studies. 17 (2): 458–460. eISSN 1750-6999. ISSN 1750-6980 – via Sage Journals.
  55. ^ a b Selvam, Betsy Jenifer; Meenu, B (2026-03-09). "Neuroqueer Embodiment and Nomadic Subjectivity in Autistic Life Writing". Medical Humanities. doi:10.1136/medhum-2025-013552. S2CID 286375671.

Books

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