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The power of theatrical performance is universal, but the style and
concerns of theatre are specific to individual cultures. This
volume in the Global Theatre Perspectives series presents a
reconstructed ancient performance text, four one-act indigenous
African plays and five modern dramas from various regions of Africa
and the Caribbean Diaspora. Because these plays span centuries and
are the work of artists from diverse cultures, readers can see
elements that occur across time and space. Physicalized ritual,
direct interaction with spectators, improvisation, music, drumming,
and metaphorical animal characters help create the theatrical forms
in multiple plays. Recurring themes include the establishment or
challenging of political authority, the oppression or corruption of
government, societal expectations based on gender, the complex and
transformational nature of identity, and the power of dreams.
Though each play is its own unique entity, reading them together
allows readers to explore what theatrical elements and cultural
concerns are perhaps essentially African. The Caribbean plays add
further perspective to the questions of what values, theatrical and
societal, are part of African drama, how these have influenced the
Caribbean aesthetic, and what the relationships are between the old
and new world. Among the creators of the pieces are two Nobel
Laureates, those who have been exiled or jailed for the political
nature of their work, and the author of his country’s first
constitution. The volume can serve as the primary text for an
intensive semester-long investigation of African drama and culture.
But it is also possible to use this volume along with others in the
series as texts for a single course on drama from around the world.
The global perspectives approach, letting works from ancient,
indigenous, and modern times resonate with each other, encourages
thinking across boundaries and connective human understanding.
The power of theatrical performance is universal, but the style and
concerns of theatre are specific to individual cultures. This
volume in the Global Theatre Perspectives series presents a
reconstructed ancient performance text, four one-act indigenous
African plays and five modern dramas from various regions of Africa
and the Caribbean Diaspora. Because these plays span centuries and
are the work of artists from diverse cultures, readers can see
elements that occur across time and space. Physicalized ritual,
direct interaction with spectators, improvisation, music, drumming,
and metaphorical animal characters help create the theatrical forms
in multiple plays. Recurring themes include the establishment or
challenging of political authority, the oppression or corruption of
government, societal expectations based on gender, the complex and
transformational nature of identity, and the power of dreams.
Though each play is its own unique entity, reading them together
allows readers to explore what theatrical elements and cultural
concerns are perhaps essentially African. The Caribbean plays add
further perspective to the questions of what values, theatrical and
societal, are part of African drama, how these have influenced the
Caribbean aesthetic, and what the relationships are between the old
and new world. Among the creators of the pieces are two Nobel
Laureates, those who have been exiled or jailed for the political
nature of their work, and the author of his country’s first
constitution. The volume can serve as the primary text for an
intensive semester-long investigation of African drama and culture.
But it is also possible to use this volume along with others in the
series as texts for a single course on drama from around the world.
The global perspectives approach, letting works from ancient,
indigenous, and modern times resonate with each other, encourages
thinking across boundaries and connective human understanding.
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