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Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts
This edited book documents practices of learning-oriented language
assessment through practitioner research and research syntheses.
Learning-oriented language assessment refers to language assessment
strategies that capitalise on learner differences and their
relationships with the learning environments. In other words,
learners are placed at the centre of the assessment process and its
outcomes. The book features 17 chapters on learning-oriented
language assessment practices in China, Brazil, Turkey, Norway, UK,
Canada, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and Spain. Chapters include teachers'
reflections and practical suggestions. This book will appeal to
researchers, teacher educators, and language teachers who are
interested in advancing research and practice of learning-oriented
language assessment.
A practical guide to the principles of teaching and learning
movement, this book instructs the actor on how to train the body to
become a medium of expression. Starting with a break-down of the
principles of actor training through exercises and theatre games,
Dick McCaw teaches the actor about their own body and its
possibilities including: the different ways it can move, the space
it occupies and finally its rhythm, timing and pacing. With 64
exercises supported by diagrams and online video, Dick McCaw draws
on his 20 years of teaching experience to coach the reader in the
dynamics of movement education to achieve a responsive and
articulate body.
Dice Mysteries is a study into the world of dice aimed as a
resource for the mystery - psychic entertainer As a hardbound,
dust-jacket covered book - it runs at over 580 pages ! It initially
delves into its journey from the shaman to the layman, then through
history into its roles in society, religion and science, including
various cultural and indigenous perspectives. Many types of dice
are reviewed, alongside their varied uses, from reading systems to
gambling and cheating plus performance applications and routines.
Steve Drury's own ideas are included throughout, plus there are
varied supporting contributions from: Les Cross, Richard Webster,
Stephen Ball, David Berglas, Lior Manor, Mark Chandaue, Richard
Osterlind, Ronald J. Dayton, Pablo Amira, Docc Hilford, T.C.Tahoe,
Seamus Maguire, Dale Hildebrandt, Danny Proctor, Kenton Knepper,
Craig Conley, Steve Cook, Scott St Clair, Neal Scryer, Jackie
McClements, Cara Hamilton, Vito Gattullo and Sudo. Foreword is by
Ronald J. Dayton
Erotic Colors of Life: Relaxing Moments is the first in the series
of books by Colors of Life and Love. This series of adult erotic
coloring books will give the book's owner the chance to explore
different scenes with models expressing sensual poses. This is not
your average coloring book. Visit colorsoflifeandlove.com for more
information. Real People Real Photos Real Pages ...Your Colors.
Built for mental well-being.
This is the first book length study of performance activism. While
Performance Studies recognizes the universality of human
performance in daily life, what is specifically under investigation
here is performance as an activity intentionally entered into as a
means of engaging social issues and conflicts, that is, as an
ensemble activity by which we re-construct/transform social
reality. Performance Activism: Precursors and Contemporary Pioneers
provides a global overview of the growing interface of performance
with education, therapy, conflict resolution, civic engagement,
community development and social justice activism. It combines an
historical study of the processes by which, over the course of the
20th Century, performance has been loosened from the institutional
constraints of the theatre with a mosaic-like overview of the
diverse work/play of contemporary performance activists around the
world. Performance Activism will be of interest to theatre and
cultural historians, performance practitioners and researchers,
psychologists and sociologists, educators and youth workers,
community organizers and political activists.
Funny, lively and unpredictable, stand-up comedy is above all a
medium to be enjoyed. Popular as a good night out and packing the
TV schedules, stand-up permeates British society and culture.
Ubiquitous though it is, we are generally reluctant to consider
comedy's social consequences. When comedians offend we seem ready
to consider the potential for stand-up to do some wider harm, yet
we rarely consider the good that it might do. This book looks at
the social and political impact of stand-up comedy in both its
positive and negative forms. Drawing on exclusive interviews with
comedians such as Stewart Lee, Josie Long, Joe Wilkinson and Mark
Thomas, and examples of comic material on everything from
revolution, terrorism and homosexuality, to knitting and the
inefficiency of the home shower, it explores comedy's role in
determining our attitudes and opinions. While revealing the
conventions comics use to manage audience response, Sophie Quirk
demonstrates how comedy audiences allow themselves to be
manipulated, and the potential harm - and real benefits - that may
arise from 'just' being funny.
From early twentieth-century stag films to 1960s sexploitation
pictures to the boom in 1970s "porno chic," adult cinema's vintage
forms are now being reappraised by a new generation of historians,
fans, preservationists, and home video entrepreneurs-all of whom
depend on and help shape the archive of film history. But what is
the present-day allure of these artifacts that have since become
eroticized more for their "pastness" than the explicit acts they
show? And what are the political implications of recovering these
rare but still-visceral films from a less "enlightened,"
pre-feminist past? Drawing on media industry analysis, archival
theory, and interviews with adult video personnel, David Church
argues that vintage pornography retains its retrospective
fascination precisely because these culturally denigrated texts
have been so poorly preserved on political and aesthetic grounds.
Through these films' ongoing moves from cultural emergence to
concealment to rediscovery, the archive itself performs a
"striptease," permitting tangible contact with these corporeally
stimulating forms at a moment when the overall physicality of media
objects is undergoing rapid transformation. Disposable Passions
explores the historiographic lessons that vintage pornography can
teach us about which materials our society chooses to keep, and how
a long-neglected genre is primed for serious rediscovery as more
than mere autoerotic fodder.
Dorothy Parker holds a place in history as one of New York's most
beloved writers. Now, for the first time in nearly a century, the
public is invited to enjoy Mrs. Parker's sharp wit and biting
commentary on the Jazz Age hits and flops in this first-ever
published collection of her groundbreaking Broadway
reviews.Starting when she was twenty-four at Vanity Fair as New
York's only female theatre critic, Mrs. Parker reviewed some of the
biggest names of the era: the Barrymores, George M. Cohan, W.C.
Fields, Helen Hayes, Al Jolson, Eugene O'Neil, Will Rogers, and the
Ziegfeld Follies. Her words of praise--and contempt--for the
dramas, comedies, musicals, and revues are just as fresh and funny
today as they were in the age of speakeasies and bathtub gin.
Annotated with a notes section by Kevin C. Fitzpatrick, president
of the Dorothy Parker Society, the volume shares Parker's outspoken
opinions of a great era of live theatre in America, from a time
before radio, talking pictures, and television decimated
attendance. Dorothy Parker: Complete Broadway, 1918-1923 provides a
fascinating glimpse of Broadway in its Golden Era and literary life
in New York through the eyes of a renowned theatre critic.
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