Essays by leading scholars expand understandings of theatrical realism through East Asian performances across premodern, modern, and contemporary periods
Explores the history of American musical theater’s engagement with notions of madness, from Man of La Mancha to A Strange Loop
How a 100-year-old play about spiritual possession beyond the grave continues to engage and fascinate
Artists and scholars celebrate the development, diversity, and ethics of Puerto Rican experimental dance
How opera practitioners represent sexual violence on today’s opera stages
Recovers the life and art of Bradford Ropes, author of 42nd Street and chronicler of gay lives in early show business
Recovers the life and art of Bradford Ropes, author of 42nd Street and chronicler of gay lives in early show business
How one opera company represents the economic precarity and aesthetic possibilities of operatic performance in the twenty-first century U.S.
Performances as feminist, queer, and trans activism, from theater and flash mobs to street protests and online manifestos
Revisiting the Stanford Prison Experiment and other psychological experiments as performance and theater
Revisiting the Stanford Prison Experiment and other psychological experiments as performance and theater
Explores drama’s powerful capacity to model nuanced political action
Examining how Blackness has been historically staged in German theater and how it should be represented today
Reveals the deep entanglement of technological modernization, political agendas, and the performing arts in modern China
Reveals the deep entanglement of technological modernization, political agendas, and the performing arts in modern China
Combining urban experiences and experimental dance to develop metropolitan dance texts