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What is the relationship between 'body' and 'mind', 'inner' and
'outer' in any approach to acting? How have different modes of
actor training shaped actors' experiences of acting and how they
understand their work? Phillip B. Zarrilli, Jerri Daboo and Rebecca
Loukes offer insight into such questions, analysing acting as a
psychophysical phenomenon and process across cultures and
disciplines, and providing in-depth accounts of culturally and
historically specific approaches to acting. Individual chapters
explore:
- psychophysical acting and the legacy of Stanislavsky
- European psychophysical practices of dance and theatre
- traditional and contemporary psychophysical approaches to
performance in India and Japan
- insights from the new sciences on the 'situated bodymind' of the
actor
- intercultural perspectives on acting
This lively study is ideal for students and practitioners alike.
India, South Asia, festivals, Cultural studies, Heritage, ecology,
art history, Heritage studies, performance, Theatre
This book was awarded a Special Mention Citation in the 2010
competition for the 'de la Torre Bueno Prize' by The Society of
Dance History Scholars. In the region of Salento in Southern Italy,
the music and dance of the pizzica has been used in the ritual of
tarantism for many centuries as a means to cure someone bitten by
the taranta spider. This book, a historical and ethnographic study
of tarantism and pizzica, draws upon seven hundred years of
writings about the ritual contributed by medical practitioners,
scientists, travel writers and others. It also investigates the
contemporary revival of interest in pizzica music and dance as part
of the 'neo-tarantism' movement, where pizzica and the history of
tarantism form a complex web of place, culture and identity for
Salentines today. This is one of the first books in English to
explore this fascinating ritual practice and its contemporary
resurgence. It uses an interdisciplinary framework based in
performance studies to ask wider questions about the experience of
the body in performance, and the potential of music and dance to
create a sense of personal and collective transformation and
efficacy.
Staging British South Asian Culture: Bollywood and Bhangra in
British Theatre looks afresh at the popularity of forms and
aesthetics from Bollywood films and bhangra music and dance on the
British stage. From Andrew Lloyd Webber's Bombay Dreams to the
finals of Britain's Got Talent, Jerri Daboo reconsiders the
centrality of Bollywood and bhangra to theatre made for or about
British South Asian communities. Addressing rarely discussed
theatre companies such as Rifco, and phenomena such as the
emergence of large- scale Bollywood revue performances, this volume
goes some way towards remedying the lack of critical discourse
around British South Asian theatre. A timely contribution to this
growing field, Staging British South Asian Culture is essential
reading for any scholar or student interested in exploring the
highly contested questions of identity and representation for
British South Asian communities.
Staging British South Asian Culture: Bollywood and Bhangra in
British Theatre looks afresh at the popularity of forms and
aesthetics from Bollywood films and bhangra music and dance on the
British stage. From Andrew Lloyd Webber's Bombay Dreams to the
finals of Britain's Got Talent, Jerri Daboo reconsiders the
centrality of Bollywood and bhangra to theatre made for or about
British South Asian communities. Addressing rarely discussed
theatre companies such as Rifco, and phenomena such as the
emergence of large- scale Bollywood revue performances, this volume
goes some way towards remedying the lack of critical discourse
around British South Asian theatre. A timely contribution to this
growing field, Staging British South Asian Culture is essential
reading for any scholar or student interested in exploring the
highly contested questions of identity and representation for
British South Asian communities.
This volume is an edited collection of critical essays on British
Asian theatre. It includes contributions from a number of
researchers who have been active in the field for a substantial
period of time. This title is complemented by British South Asian
Theatres: A Documented History by the same authors, also available
from University of Exeter Press.
This edited collection examines culture and identity in Indian
diaspora communities in Southeast Asia, and the UK. Using
methodologies such as transnational and diaspora studies, history,
autoethnography and family histories, the contributions here
explore the movements of people from the Indian subcontinent across
generations to a wide range of countries. Cultural practices
including the use of performance, food, rituals, religion,
education, employment, and names demonstrate how identities and
practices are preserved, as well as adapted, in new contexts. This
offers original insights into transnational movements of people,
and how culture becomes a major part in the formation of a
diaspora. The focus on Southeast Asia creates new knowledge by
shifting the theoretical focus towards a region that shows great
multiplicity in Indian migrant populations over a considerable
period of time, but which has remained under-researched. The
chapters on the UK act as a counterpoint to this, and contribute to
the complex picture of shifting borders and practices across
nations and generations.
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