""Theater Historiography: Critical Interventions" is an
important collection. The essays on theater history are models of
meticulous research engaged through rigorous theorizing and
analysis; they often yield striking new insights into subjects we
might think we already know well. Other essays provide new
perspectives on how to approach theater and performance, and are
passionate calls to reconsider how we engage objects of study. The
larger cultural contexts and analyses in the section 'Theatre
History's Discipline' should prove invaluable for furthering
important conversations about the field."
---Rhonda Blair, Southern Methodist University
"In this exciting collection, theater historiography becomes a
veritable hotbed in which theater history and performance studies
productively, even seamlessly, intertwine. These richly diverse yet
cogently edited essays incisively address the dynamic
methodological, political, and pedagogical challenges of reading
past performances in the present. Contributors honor their teachers
with fresh interventions and a critically engaged passion for doing
theater history that will inspire both established and emerging
generations of scholars."
---Kim Marra, University of Iowa
"Redraws 'theater history' in fiercely imaginative, inspired,
and provocative ways."
---Harley Erdman, University of Massachusetts
"A major collection that brings together new voices in the field
. . . its range and breadth are impressive, and its usefulness in
the classroom undeniable."
---Ric Knowles, University of Guelph
How should theater history be practiced? Some scholars have
argued that the emerging discipline of performance studies should
replace theater history altogether, while traditional theater
historians have sometimes rejected performance studies analyses as
unsatisfactorily diffuse and less than rigorous. "Theater
Historiography: Critical Interventions" draws freely on the methods
and terminologies of both disciplines, showing that the critical
intersection between theater history and performance studies is
both desirable and inevitable. The book's original essays, based on
innovative and compelling research by 23 contributors, probe key
methodological questions about interdisciplinarity,
postcolonialism, the archive, and digital technology.
Henry Bial is Associate Professor of Theater at the University
of Kansas.
Scott Magelssen is Associate Professor of Theater and Film at
Bowling Green State University.
General
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