This is the second book in the Performance and Communities series. An edited collection from academics and artists engages with both these notions of performance – that of identities in and through time and space – and of more formal instances of specific time-limited performances; textual, embodied, visual and communal.
Each chapter focuses on an individual or group’s mode of working and methodological practice of performance across a range of modes, disciplines and media – from community opera to online queer performance, from anti-racist class-room pedagogy to 1980s cabaret in nightclubs, from community art projects in schools to community writing projects in transport interchanges, the performers, writers and creators represented here all engage and grapple with contemporary performance as a situated practice and as a problematic.
The personal perspective of each performer – directors, librettists, producers, writers, performers – is explicitly located in a community and the book offers a series of case studies detailing socially engaged work that aligns with concepts of performance and community.
Spis treści
List of figures
Abstracts
Introduction
Kate Aughterson and Jess Moriarty
SECTION ONE: CHANGING THEATRES
1. In Our Sites: A Personal View of the Writer’s Role in Place-Making Theatre with, by, and for Communities
Sara Clifford
2. Dramatizing Recent History: The Bombing of the Grand Hotel
Julie Everton
3. Thoughts on Appropriation – Collaboration for Silkmoth
Eleanor Knight
4. Disremembered Cabaret Histories
Al Meggs
5. Representation and Collective Creation: The Work of Middle East/North Africa (MENA) Arts UK
Laura Hanna
SECTION TWO: TAKING TO THE STREETS
6. Disorientation, Creativity, and Performance in Liminal Spaces: A Case Study of a Writer in Residence at Heathrow Airport and Oval Underground Station
Dawn Hart
7. Conversations between Borders: Cyclical Thinking and Alternative Worlds
Emily Orley
8. Extinction Rebellion and Performance Activism on the Streets of London
Marisa Carnesky
9. Making Community from Mess: Mapping the Santiago de Cuba Carnival and the Carnivalesque of My Research Journey Through Poetry
Yvonne Canham-Spence
SECTION THREE: TRANSFORMING SPACES AND STORIES
10. Holding Queer Space/Holding Space Queerly: Lockdown Reflections on Queer Performance and Community
Ess Grange and Mal Parry
11. You’ll Never Forget, I’ll Never Remember. You’ll Never Remember, I’ll Never Forget
Rachel Dean, Marie Hallager Andersen, and Daliah Touré
12. Preserving Fruit: Using Oral History to Preserve Stories of Black British History and the Transatlantic Journeys from Which Our Traditions Have Emerged
Veneta Roberts
SECTION FOUR: OPENING UP INSTITUTIONS
13. Beyond The Room
Marina Castledine
14. Monsters and Campfires: Using Storytelling to Humanize Institutional Spaces
Finlay Mc Inally and Jess Moriarty
15. The Clothes on Our Backs: Diversifying the Curriculum
Tony Kalume and Jess Moriarty
Notes on Contributors
O autorze
Kate Aughterson is lecturer in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century literature at the University of Manchester. She is author of Renaissance Woman (Routledge, 1995), The English Renaissance: An Anthology (Routledge, 1998), John Webster: The Plays (Palgrave, 2000), Aphra Behn: The Comedies (Palgrave, 2003), Shakespeare: The Late Plays (Palgrave, 2013); co-edited two volumes of the Journal of Writing in Creative Practice on place-based writing; co-authored Shakespeare and Gender (Bloomsbury, 2021);Women’s Experimental Narratives: Early Modern to Contemporary (Palgrave, 2021); and Women Experimenting in Theatre (Palgrave 2024) and co-edited Jim Crace: Into the Wilderness (Palgrave, 2018). She has contributed entries on early modern women writers for the DNB, and written articles on feminist utopian writing, the rhetoric of plain style and gender, gender and drama in the early modern period and Shakespeare’s late soliloquies.
Contact: Department of English Literature, American Studies and Creative Writing; University of Manchester; Oxford Road; Manchester; M13 9PL.