African American Performance and Theater History : A Critical Reader. için kapak resmi
African American Performance and Theater History : A Critical Reader.
Başlık:
African American Performance and Theater History : A Critical Reader.
Yazar:
Elam, Harry J.
ISBN:
9780198029281
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Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (382 pages)
İçerik:
Contents -- Contributors -- The Device of Race: An Introduction -- PART I: SOCIAL PROTEST AND THE POLITICS OF REPRESENTATION -- 1 Uncle Tom's Women -- 2 Political Radicalism and Artistic Innovation in the Works of Lorraine Hansberry -- 3 The Black Arts Movement: Performance, Neo-Orality, and the Destruction of the "White Thing" -- 4 Beyond a Liberal Audience -- PART II: CULTURAL TRADITIONS, CULTUTRAL MEMORY, AND PERFORMANCE -- 5 Deep Skin: Reconstructing Congo Square -- 6 "Calling on the Spirit": The Performativity of Black Women's Faith in the Baptist Church Spiritual Traditions and Its Radical Possibilities for Resistance -- 7 The Chitlin Circuit -- 8 Audience and Africanisms in August Wilson's Dramaturgy: A Case Study -- PART III: INTERSECTIONS OF RACE AND GENDER -- 9 Black Minstrelsy and Double Inversion, Circa 1890 -- 10 Black Salome: Exoticism, Dance, and Racial Myths -- 11 Uh Tiny Land Mass Just Outside of My Vocabulary: Expression of Creative Nomadism and Contemporary African American Playwrights -- 12 Attending Walt Whitman High: The Lessons of Pomo Afro Homos' Dark Fruit -- PART IV: AFRICAN AMERICAN PERFORMATIVITY AND THE PERFORMANCE OF RACE -- 13 Acting Out Miscegenation -- 14 Birmingham's Federal Theater Project Negro Unit: The Administration of Race -- 15 The Black Performer and the Performance of Blackness: The Escape -- or, A Leap to Freedom by William Wells Brown and No Place To Be Somebody by Charles Gordone -- 16 The Costs of Re-Membering: What's at Stake in Gayl Jones's Corregidora -- PART V: ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION WITH SENIOR SCHOLARS -- 17 African American Theater: The State of the Profession, Past, Present, and Future -- Roundtable discussion -- Afterword: Change Is Coming -- Selected Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y.
Özet:
African American Performance and Theater History is an anthology of critical writings that explores the intersections of race, theater, and performance in America. Assembled by two esteemed scholars in black theater, Harry J. Elam, Jr. and David Krasner, and composed of essays from acknowledged authorities in the field, this anthology is organized into four sections representative of the ways black theater, drama, and performance interact and enact continual social, cultural, and political dialogues. Ranging from a discussion of dramatic performances of Uncle Tom's Cabin to the Black Art Movement of the 1960s and early 1970s, articles gathered in the first section, "Social Protest and the Politics of Representation," discuss the ways in which African American theater and performance have operated as social weapons and tools of protest. The second section of the volume, "Cultural Traditions, Cultural Memory and Performance," features, among other essays, Joseph Roach's chronicle of the slave performances at Congo Square in New Orleans and Henry Louis Gates, Jr.'s critique of August Wilson's cultural polemics. "Intersections of Race and Gender," the third section, includes analyses of the intersections of race and gender on the minstrel stage, the plight of black female choreographers at the inception of Modern Dance, and contemporary representations of black homosexuality by PomoAfro Homo. Using theories of performance and performativity, articles in the fourth section, "African American Performativity and the Performance of Race," probe into the ways blackness and racial identity have been constructed in and through performance. The final section is a round-table assessment of the past and present state of African American Theater and Performance Studies by some of the leading senior scholars in the field--James V. Hatch, Sandra L. Richards, and

Margaret B. Wilkerson. Revealing the dynamic relationship between race and theater, this volume illustrates how the social and historical contexts of production critically affect theatrical performances of blackness and their meanings and, at the same time, how African American cultural, social, and political struggles have been profoundly affected by theatrical representations and performances. This one-volume collection is sure to become an important reference for those studying black theater and an engrossing survey for all readers of African American literature.
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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