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Toward a Just Pedagogy of Performance: Historiography, Narrative, and Equity in Dramatic Practice [Hardback]

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"This book is a compendium of resources largely by and for artists and scholars interested in engaging in conversations of justice, diversity, and historiography in the fields of theatre and performance studies. For these students, and for the future instructors in our field who will use this book, we hold a tripartite hope: to expand, to enable, and to provide access. In its whole, we intend for this book to provoke its readers to question the narratives of history that they've received (and that they may promulgate) in their artistic and scholarly work. We aim to question methods and ethics of reading present in the western mode of studying drama and performance history. The contributions in the book-not traditional chapters, but manifestos, experiences, articles, conversations, and provocations-raise questions and illuminate gaps, and they do not speak in a unified voice or from a static position. These pieces are written by artists, graduate students, teachers, administrators, and undergraduates; these are expressions of hope and of experience, and not of dogma. This book is aimed toward instructors of undergraduates, both graduate students and faculty at all levels of seniority within theatre and performance studies, as well as at artists and practitioners of the art that wish to find more just ways of viewing history"--

This book is a compendium of resources largely by and for artists and scholars interested in engaging in conversations of justice, diversity, and historiography in the fields of theatre and performance studies.

For these students, and for the future instructors in our field who will use this book, we hold a tripartite hope: to expand, to enable, and to provide access. In its whole, we intend for this book to provoke its readers to question the narratives of history that they’ve received (and that they may promulgate) in their artistic and scholarly work. We aim to question methods and ethics of reading present in the western mode of studying drama and performance history. The contributions in the book—not traditional chapters, but manifestos, experiences, articles, conversations, and provocations—raise questions and illuminate gaps, and they do not speak in a unified voice or from a static position. These pieces are written by artists, graduate students, teachers, administrators, and undergraduates; these are expressions of hope and of experience, and not of dogma.

This book is aimed toward instructors of undergraduates, both graduate students and faculty at all levels of seniority within theatre and performance studies, as well as at artists and practitioners of the art that wish to find more just ways of viewing history.



This book is a compendium of resources largely by and for artists and scholars interested in engaging in conversations of justice, diversity, and historiography in the fields of theatre and performance studies.

Preface by Charles OMalley

Interlude: What / How
by Willow James

Part One: Our Art

The Alternative Canon: A Collaborative Discussion Panel One: A Look at the
Past
A Conversation with Sharai Bohannon, David Clauson, Monty Cole, Lavina
Jadhwani, Coya Paz, Denise Yvette Serna, and Dan Smith

On the Move: A Methodology for Teaching Theater Histories of Latinxs in the
Americas
by Nahuel Telleria

Roundtable on Teaching and Studying Asian Theatre in the American Academy
A Conversation with Arnab Banerji, Jyana S. Browne, Po-Hsien Chu, Tarryn
Chun, Jennifer Goodlander, Claire Pamment, Shayoni Mitra, Yining Shang, and
Satoko Shimazaki. Facilitated by Amanda Culp

Interlude: An Intimate Night with Theatrical Black Excellence.
by Cleopatra Mavhunga

Part Two: Our Field

The Alternative Canon: A Collaborative Discussion Panel Two: Practices for
the Present
A Conversation with David Clauson, Monty Cole, Kee-Yoon Nahm, Coya Paz,
Denise Yvette Serna, and Dan Smith

When We Meet: Intercultural Theatre Before and After the Coronavirus
Pandemic
by Nikhil Mehta

Choosing the Best Translation for Plays Outside the Western Canon on the
Syllabus
by Kee-Yoon Nahm

The Geography of Our Discernment: What it Means to Show Up as Our Full
Selves
by Nithya Nagarajan and Zainab Syed

From Dissertation Page to Stage: Applying Graduate Studies to the Regional
Theater Production Process
by Taylor Barfield

Responsible Gatekeeping: Or, Questions I'm Asking Myself
by Kari Olmon

Interlude: The Lesser of Two Evils(?): How Not To Create Spaces for Brown
Trans Artistry
by Catherine Alam-Nist

Part Three: Our Teaching

The Alternative Canon: A Collaborative Discussion Panel Three: Toward Utopia
by A Conversation with Sharai Bohannon, David Clauson, Kee-Yoon Nahm, and Dan
Smith

How Liberal Arts Theatre Programs Are Failing Their Students of Color
by Miranda Haymon

Interlude: Double Communication: Artist as Critic and Critic as Artist
by Lil Wenker

Close Reading: How Do Texts Perform?
by Ariel Sibert and Charles OMalley

On the Ethics of Reading: A Suggestion and a Plea
by Charles OMalley

Better Worlds through Pedagogy: A Vision for the Theater Classroom
by Jake Allen, Kyara Mahlan, and Kelli Shermeyer with contributions by
Allison Bialas and Elyssa Armenta

Adaptation as Historiography: An Approach for Undergraduate Teaching
by Elise Morrison
Charles O'Malley is a writer and dramaturg.