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E-grāmata: Oxford Handbook of American Drama [Oxford Handbooks Online E-books]

Edited by (Professor of Theatre), (Professor of Theatre, University of Maryland)
  • Formāts: 592 pages, 8 halftones
  • Sērija : Oxford Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Apr-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199983131
  • Oxford Handbooks Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 592 pages, 8 halftones
  • Sērija : Oxford Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Apr-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199983131
When one thinks of American Drama, names like Eugene O'Neill, Arthur Miller, and Tennessee Williams readily come to mind. However, as The Oxford Handbook of American Drama shows, the U.S. has a deep and varied tradition that extends back to the years before the Revolutionary War. The essays gathered here trace U.S dramatic history, ranging from plays by Mercy Otis Warren to Tony Kushner.

The volume opens with an exploration of the trials and tribulations of strolling players in the colonial era, before shifting to a discussion of the ways plays were deployed for political ends during the Revolution, most notably by the patriot Mercy Otis Warren. The narrative extends to the post-Revolutionary period when plays were used as vehicles to promote republican virtue. Contributors also explore the vibrant drama to emerge during the nineteenth century, when blackface performers and stars such as Edwin Forrest, Charlotte Cushman, and Edwin Booth dominated the stage. The period also witnessed the arrival of the first piece of musical theater, The Black Crook, which is productively situated in a musical tradition that extends to Rodgers and Hammerstein. The Handbook offers a complex treatment of melodrama - the most popular genre of the century. The volume traces the rise of the country's first black acting company in the 1820s, as well as the growing number of ethnic characters presented on the stage. Several of the contributors also highlight the role of women playwrights such as Anna Cora Mowatt in the development of American drama.

At the turn of the twentieth century, the Provincetown Players helped to usher in the era of modern drama, which allowed playwrights such as Eugene O'Neill, Susan Glaspell, and Edna St. Vincent Millay to experiment with the form and attempt topics regarded as taboo at the time. As melodrama gave way to realism, exemplified in the work of O'Neill and Rachel Crothers, other dramatic techniques such as naturalism and expressionism were introduced to the stage. Other topics covered in the Handbook include: the political plays of Arthur Miller; the major freedoms brought to the American stage since the 1960s; the new generation of playwrights, such as Tony Kushner and Harvey Fierstein, who created plays dealing explicitly with topics like AIDS and homosexuality; and the rich genealogy of the African American family play in works by Lorraine Hansberry, August Wilson, and Suzan-Lori Parks. The volume concludes with the bold performance art of the Living Theatre and the new multiculturalism that arrived on the contemporary stage, with various ethnic communities --Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Asians, and Native Americans-becoming the focus of the action. The Oxford Handbook of American Drama presents a comprehensive introduction to the form in all its guises.
Preface ix
List of Contributors
xi
Introduction 1(15)
Jeffrey H. Richards
1 Theatre Companies before the Revolution
16(16)
Odai Johnson
2 Revolutionary American Drama and Theatre
32(18)
Jason Shaffer
3 Early Republican Drama
50(17)
Jeffrey H. Richards
4 The Politics of Antebellum Melodrama
67(14)
Scott C. Martin
5 Minstrelsy and Uncle Tom
81(16)
Sarah Meer
6 Representing Ethnic Identity on the Antebellum Stage, 1825--61
97(17)
Heather S. Nathans
7 Antebellum Plays by Women: Contexts and Themes
114(16)
Amelia Howe Kritzer
8 Reform Drama
130(19)
Mark Mullen
9 Antebellum Frontier and Urban Plays, 1825--60
149(10)
Rosemarie Bank
10 Late Melodrama
159(14)
Mark Hodin
11 A New Realism
173(16)
Mark Fearnow
12 American Musical Theatre, 1870--1945
189(14)
Thomas S. Hischak
13 The New Woman, the Suffragist, and the Stage
203(15)
Katherine E. Kelly
14 The Rise of African American Drama, 1822--79
218(16)
Marvin McAllister
15 The Provincetown Players in American Culture
234(14)
Brenda Murphy
16 Eugene O'Neill
248(16)
Steven F. Bloom
17 Naturalism and Expressionism in American Drama
264(16)
Julia A. Walker
18 American Political Drama, 1910--45
280(15)
Christopher J. Herr
19 The Federal Theatre Project
295(12)
Barry B. Witham
20 African American Drama, 1910--45
307(15)
Kathy A. Perkins
21 Arthur Miller: A Radical Politics of the Soul
322(18)
Jeffrey D. Mason
22 Tennessee Williams and the Winemiller Inheritance
340(16)
Stephen Bottoms
23 Experimental Theatre: Beyond Illusion
356(19)
Theodore Shank
24 Post--World War II African American Theatre
375(17)
Harry J. Elam, Jr.
25 The Postwar Musical
392(16)
Michelle Dvoskin
26 Postwar Protest Plays
408(17)
S. E. Wilmer
27 Feminist Drama
425(16)
Dorothy Chansky
28 Postwar Drama and Technology
441(14)
Roger Bechtel
29 Drama and the New Sexualities
455(15)
Jordan Schildcrout
30 Political Drama
470(15)
Stephen Watt
31 Ethnicity and Postwar Drama
485(15)
Jon D. Rossini
32 Running Lines: Narratives of Twenty-First-Century American Theatre
500(23)
Marc Robinson
Index 523
Jeffrey H. Richards was Eminent Professor of Literature at Old Dominion University. He was the author of Drama Theater, and Identity in the American New Republic and the editor of Early Plays: Eugene O'Neill and Early American Drama (Penguin; 2001, 1997).

Heather S. Nathans is Professor of Theatre at the University of Maryland and the new President of the American Society for Theatre Research.