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Professing Performance

Professing Performance

Professing Performance

Theatre in the Academy from Philology to Performativity
Shannon Jackson, University of California, Berkeley
April 2004
Paperback
9780521656054

    Today's academic discourse is filled with the word 'perform'. Nestled amongst a variety of prefixes and suffixes (re-, post-, -ance, -ivity?), the term functions as a vehicle for a host of contemporary inquiries. For students, artists, and scholars of performance and theatre, this development is intriguing and complex. By examining the history of theatre studies and related institutions and by comparing the very different disciplinary interpretations and developments that led to this engagement, Professing Performance offers ways of placing performance theory and performance studies in context. This 2004 book considers the connection amongst a range of performance forms such as oratory, theatre, dance, and performance art and explores performance as both a humanistic and technical field of education. Throughout, she explores the institutional history of performance in the US academy in order to revise current debates around the role of the arts and humanities in higher education.

    • Shows the relationship between past institutional histories and tradition and current scholarly and artistic practices in performance
    • Shows both the opportunities and hazards of using performance as an interdisciplinary site of inquiry
    • Critiques rather than perpetuates the professional underpinnings of the opposition between the scholar and the artist

    Product details

    April 2004
    Paperback
    9780521656054
    268 pages
    217 × 139 × 18 mm
    0.38kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Discipline and performance: genealogy and discontinuity
    • 2. Institutions and performance: professing performance in the early twentieth century
    • 3. Culture and Performance: structures of dramatic feeling
    • 4. Practice and performance: modernist paradoxes and literalist legacies
    • 5. History and performance: blurred genres and the particularising of the past
    • 6. Identity and performance: racial performativity and anti-racist theatre.
      Author
    • Shannon Jackson , University of California, Berkeley