***Listed in THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION's Weekly Book List,
July 11, 2011***
Identifying an apprehension about the nature and constitution of
urbanism in North American plays, "Urban Drama" examines how cities
like New York City and Los Angeles became focal points for identity
politics and social justice at the end of the twentieth century. In
plays as different as Tony Kushner's "Angels in America," Anna
Deavere Smith's "Twilight Los Angeles, 1992," and David Henry
Hwang's "FOB," these concerns became spatialized against the urban
environment, suggesting a shift of consciousness toward what
critical geography has argued: The social is always spatial. "Urban
Drama" interrogates how this shift informs playwriting in the 1980s
and 1990s and inspires new modes of dramatic representation.
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