The essay considers the work of the playwright Cherríe Moraga. It traces similarities and differences between The Hungry Woman: A Mexican Medea, Moraga's 2001 play, and the Euripidean work. It also considers a 2005 production by the Drama Department at Stanford University which was part of the ‘Rite to Remember: Performance and Xicana/Indigena Thought’ or R2R Project. This was a yearlong programme that focused on indigenous thought and non-European approaches to performance hosted by the Drama Department during 2005. The essay explores how Moraga combines indigenous performance practices with elements of European theatrical traditions in order to rewrite the ancient Greek myth for present-day audiences. I argue that this is achieved through...
I did not choose this play, it chose me. My focus for the Independent Study period of my SIT study a...
This dissertation is an interdisciplinary decolonial, queer women of color cultural analysis of Xica...
This project considers how Chicana playwrights Cherríe Morgana and Josefina Lopez, as well as Mexic...
The essay considers the work of the playwright Cherríe Moraga. It traces similarities and difference...
This essay looks at the work of the contemporary Mexican-American woman playwright, Cherríe Moraga. ...
This thesis focuses on Medea, the classical Greek play by Euripides that was first produced in 431 B...
As the title of this thesis already suggests it is going to be centered around the powerful mytholo...
Since the 1980s, U.S. Latina Theater has focused on presenting realistic portrayals of the feminine ...
Critical opinion over the role of popular culture in relation to ethnic and cultural identity is dee...
One of the most important influences on the development of Cherríe Moraga's feminist theatre was und...
Considerando las obras semi-autobiográficas de Cherríe Moraga y los textos críticos de académicos, ...
In the 1980s, Rita Quintero, a Tarahumara from northern Mexico, was detained in a mental hospital in...
Whereas due attention has been granted to the “black Medeas” of the post-seventies U.S. stage, the “...
Abstract: This study focuses on three recent dramatic works by Cherríe Moraga’s written in the same ...
In the second half of the twentieth century Costa Rica has witnessed a resurgence of the performing ...
I did not choose this play, it chose me. My focus for the Independent Study period of my SIT study a...
This dissertation is an interdisciplinary decolonial, queer women of color cultural analysis of Xica...
This project considers how Chicana playwrights Cherríe Morgana and Josefina Lopez, as well as Mexic...
The essay considers the work of the playwright Cherríe Moraga. It traces similarities and difference...
This essay looks at the work of the contemporary Mexican-American woman playwright, Cherríe Moraga. ...
This thesis focuses on Medea, the classical Greek play by Euripides that was first produced in 431 B...
As the title of this thesis already suggests it is going to be centered around the powerful mytholo...
Since the 1980s, U.S. Latina Theater has focused on presenting realistic portrayals of the feminine ...
Critical opinion over the role of popular culture in relation to ethnic and cultural identity is dee...
One of the most important influences on the development of Cherríe Moraga's feminist theatre was und...
Considerando las obras semi-autobiográficas de Cherríe Moraga y los textos críticos de académicos, ...
In the 1980s, Rita Quintero, a Tarahumara from northern Mexico, was detained in a mental hospital in...
Whereas due attention has been granted to the “black Medeas” of the post-seventies U.S. stage, the “...
Abstract: This study focuses on three recent dramatic works by Cherríe Moraga’s written in the same ...
In the second half of the twentieth century Costa Rica has witnessed a resurgence of the performing ...
I did not choose this play, it chose me. My focus for the Independent Study period of my SIT study a...
This dissertation is an interdisciplinary decolonial, queer women of color cultural analysis of Xica...
This project considers how Chicana playwrights Cherríe Morgana and Josefina Lopez, as well as Mexic...