Although it is widely recognized that performance permeates politics, there is surprisingly little agreement on how politics in performance plays out across different political and cultural environments. Focusing on the script as both written text and mutually constituted social role that attempts to reinforce legitimacy, this chapter develops two typologies. The first considers the script itself as either optimistic or pessimistic and that appeals to either reason or the emotions; the second how the script is imbricated with its prospective target audience(s) and the degree to which it attempts to divide or unite and either is closed or permits room for improvisation. It develops these typologies by comparing and contrasting the political ...
The use of audience participation in political theatre has become a common feature of many performan...
I use the notion of speech politics from William B. Worthen’s consideration of how the written text ...
What do we mean when we describe theatre as political today? How might theatre-makers' provocations ...
This article brings together and contextualises some ostensibly disparate ‘readings’ of political sp...
Theatre and performance scholarship has exhaustively theorised the nature of the political dimension...
The Currency of Distrust examines the intersection of politics and performance through a focus on pe...
This study explores how theatrical concepts can be applied to the analysis of performances given by ...
Third-sector political theatre is thought of in connection with socio-political goals or structural ...
The following thesis examines the possibility that the contemporary Western political leader can be ...
This book explores the role that particular dramaturgies play in our understanding of what is and wh...
The key focus of this research project is the marginalisation of radical and alternative politics in...
The plays of Arthur Miller and Kee Thuan Chye have garnered interests from theatre enthusiast, the g...
World Political Theatre and Performance: Theories, Histories, Practices is the second collection of ...
This dissertation attempts to clarify some aspects of the operation of speech acts as they relate to...
This monograph has two key aims: First, it presents a critical interrogation of the potentials of pe...
The use of audience participation in political theatre has become a common feature of many performan...
I use the notion of speech politics from William B. Worthen’s consideration of how the written text ...
What do we mean when we describe theatre as political today? How might theatre-makers' provocations ...
This article brings together and contextualises some ostensibly disparate ‘readings’ of political sp...
Theatre and performance scholarship has exhaustively theorised the nature of the political dimension...
The Currency of Distrust examines the intersection of politics and performance through a focus on pe...
This study explores how theatrical concepts can be applied to the analysis of performances given by ...
Third-sector political theatre is thought of in connection with socio-political goals or structural ...
The following thesis examines the possibility that the contemporary Western political leader can be ...
This book explores the role that particular dramaturgies play in our understanding of what is and wh...
The key focus of this research project is the marginalisation of radical and alternative politics in...
The plays of Arthur Miller and Kee Thuan Chye have garnered interests from theatre enthusiast, the g...
World Political Theatre and Performance: Theories, Histories, Practices is the second collection of ...
This dissertation attempts to clarify some aspects of the operation of speech acts as they relate to...
This monograph has two key aims: First, it presents a critical interrogation of the potentials of pe...
The use of audience participation in political theatre has become a common feature of many performan...
I use the notion of speech politics from William B. Worthen’s consideration of how the written text ...
What do we mean when we describe theatre as political today? How might theatre-makers' provocations ...