Emphasizing the resilience of theatre arts in the midst of significant political change, Theatre After Empire spotlights the emergence of new performance styles in the wake of collapsed political systems.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction Megan E. Geigner and Harvey Young; 1. Dr. See-Through and His Kin: East African Theatre in the Interregnum Joshua Williams; 2. Between Empire and Dictatorship: The Decolonial Dreams of Raúl Leis Katherine A. Zien; 3. Absurdist Theatre Goes Postcolonial: Trans-Contextuality, Absurd Jokes, and Evocation in (Post)Colonial Plays Mina Kyounghye Kwon; 4. History Plays: Performing the Anti-Apartheid Movement on Contemporary South African Stages Gibson Alessandro Cima; 5. Brendan Brehan's Depictions of Mid-Twentieth-Century Irish Failure Eleanor Owicki and Megan E. Geigner; 6. Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Development of Western Turkish Theatre and the Pursuit of Identity Elif Bä; 7. Towards a New African Personality: The National Theatre Movement of Ghana from Nkrumah to Rawlings David Afriyie Donkor; 8. Rediscovering Tradition in Modern Asian Theatre Siyuan Liu; 9. The Empire Lingers: Staging Zainichi Korean Lived Experiences in Contemporary Japan Jessica Nakamura; 10. Toward a Third Performance: Dance, Exile, and Anti-Imperialism in Fernando Solanas' Tangos: El exilio de Gardel Victoria Fortuna; 11. Bollywood Effects: Feeling Brown with Meena Kumari Kareem Khubchandani; 12. Sounding Asian American: Geeks and Superheroes in Qui Nguyen's Vietgone Esther Kim Lee