Designing Eurovision

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cultural studies
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Eurovision
Eurovision Song Contest
forthcoming
performance
scenographic
scenography
stage design
theatre

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032718750
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 May 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Designing Eurovision is the first book-length study of the visual and design elements of the Eurovision Song Contest (ESC).

As a unique visual phenomenon and commonly associated with spectacle performances, the scenography of Eurovision is in reality far more nuanced and layered, balancing acts of national identity-building with host country branding, visual tourism and cross-cultural aesthetics. The event demonstrates how ideological spaces are built across Europe and the wider world, highlighting the function of performance scenography in socio-political nation-building. Although the importance of the visual elements of Eurovision are widely acknowledged, this is the first volume to put ESC design front and centre, discussing the critical and practical aspects of creating performance scenography for this international stage. In addition, the volume highlights the significance of Eurovision in the development of performance technologies, frequently functioning as a test-bed for technological innovations in stage design for broadcast arena events. It also explores the visual design-led elements of the contest (set, costume, lighting and projection) and addresses the broader spatial dynamics of the ESC, exploring the socio-political elements of Eurovision performance space. The fluid relationship between the ESC as live performance and as Europe’s largest televised cultural event opens up additional discussions in the book related to the role of liveness in scenographic practice.

This volume brings a unique focus on the materiality of the Eurovision stage, addressing multipronged topics including the history of ESC technologies, ESC scenography and national identity, ESC aesthetics and design, and the ESC host city as stage. It also incorporates interviews with practitioners who have worked on design elements for the ESC, giving practical perspectives on design at the contest. It will be of interest to researchers and scholars of theatre and performance, scenography, the Eurovision Song Contest, popular performance, and media and cultural studies, among others.

Amy Skinner is Associate Professor in Co-Production in Mental Health Research at York St John University. She has specialist interests in scenography, mental health, and neurodiversity. Her book Meyerhold and the Cubists, on scenography and visual art, was long-listed for the 2015 Prague Quadrennial book prize. Her most recent publication explores scenography as resistance in mental health settings.

Catherine Baker is Reader in 20th Century History at Hull. She specializes in media, popular culture, and national identity in post-Cold-War Europe, and has been publishing on Eurovision since 2008. Her most recent book is the edited collection The Routledge Handbook of Popular Music and Politics of the Balkans (2025).