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First published in 1999, this volume aims to develop the field of
theatre studies by promoting the study of performative elements and
thus fostering their consideration in the critical interpretation
of dramatic literature. The authors additionally suggest ways of
approaching and evaluating the work of individual performers, as
well as of directors, designers and producers. It is an archival
guide which covers manuscript and ephemera, rather than published
texts, and attempts to indicate the potential value of the
documentary material listed. This unique reference guide provides
descriptions and evaluations of archive manuscript materials and
ephemera relating to twentieth-century British and American
theatre. Over 100 archives across Europe, North America and Britain
were examined in the compilation of this volume. The documents
include: unpublished playscripts; state and costume designs;
directors' books; prompt books; lighting plots; stage photos;
correspondence; theatre programmes. One hundred and seventy five
entries are arranged alphabetically and cover playwrights,
directors, designers and actors. By its nature, theatre is a
collaborative enterprise, a facet which is recognised in the
comprehensive cross-referencing of entries. The last twenty years
has seen a shift in drama studies from text-based criticism to
analysis of performance. The materials covered in this book have
therefore become essential to future research in the field.
First published in 1999, this volume aims to develop the field of
theatre studies by promoting the study of performative elements and
thus fostering their consideration in the critical interpretation
of dramatic literature. The authors additionally suggest ways of
approaching and evaluating the work of individual performers, as
well as of directors, designers and producers. It is an archival
guide which covers manuscript and ephemera, rather than published
texts, and attempts to indicate the potential value of the
documentary material listed. This unique reference guide provides
descriptions and evaluations of archive manuscript materials and
ephemera relating to twentieth-century British and American
theatre. Over 100 archives across Europe, North America and Britain
were examined in the compilation of this volume. The documents
include: unpublished playscripts; state and costume designs;
directors' books; prompt books; lighting plots; stage photos;
correspondence; theatre programmes. One hundred and seventy five
entries are arranged alphabetically and cover playwrights,
directors, designers and actors. By its nature, theatre is a
collaborative enterprise, a facet which is recognised in the
comprehensive cross-referencing of entries. The last twenty years
has seen a shift in drama studies from text-based criticism to
analysis of performance. The materials covered in this book have
therefore become essential to future research in the field.
Funders of mental health services to youth and families have
increasingly required providers to use treatments deemed to be
"evidence-based." There are several evidence-based family treatment
(EBFT) approaches found to be effective with the same types of
presenting problems and populations. All of these EBFTs claim to be
based on similar theoretical approaches and have specified
treatment protocols that providers must follow to be faithful to
the model. These EBFTS are expensive for agencies to establish and
maintain. Many agencies that initially adopted one of these EBFTs
later de-adopted it because they could not sustain it when billing
Medicaid is the only way to pay for such services. Meta-analyses of
treatment outcome studies have found that various theoretical
approaches to therapy are effective but no one approach is more
effective than any other. What accounts for client improvement is
not the specific treatment approach but rather the factors they all
have in common. To provide an effective, affordable, and flexible
approach to family treatment the authors of this book developed and
have conducted researched on an approach they call Integrative
Family and Systems Treatment (I-FAST). I-FAST is a meta-model
organized around the common factors to family treatment. Such a
model does not require practitioners to learn a completely new way
to provide treatment but rather it builds on and incorporates the
clinical strengths and skills they already possess. This book is a
manual for how to faithfully and flexibly provide I-FAST. A manual
for a meta-model to treatment based on the common factors has never
been provided. This book provides clear guidelines illustrated by
cases examples for not only how to provide I-FAST but also how to
teach and supervise it as well as how to integrate I-FAST with the
rest of an agency's services and programs.
This analysis of twenty published texts by David Hare employs
definitions from contemporary semiotic literary theory as a means
of describing typologies of political drama. By tracing the
incorporation of stylistic devices from agitational propaganda
(caricature, self-referentiality, the frisson between oral and
visual signification) throughout the typologies, the study
illustrates how each text subverts audience expectation based on
established dramatic genres. The collection of texts is seen as
inherently self-referential and politically subversive. At the
centre of each typology is a protagonist who functions as a martyr
to or parodic emblem of contemporary society. Consistently, the
hermeticism of public institutions which represent the political
status quo makes them immune from any form of individual protest
from the Left or Right. In the satirical anatomy, the emblem of
political dissent is coopted by involvement within the institution,
or the stage is dominated by a conservative who controls the
action. In the demythology, private individuals are seen as
incapable of altering the public frame of history; but here private
suffering subverts the collective mythology of the historical
construct. In the martyrology, the emblem of dissent is associated
with a moral virtue which is inimical to contemporary society, the
audience's expectation of the triumph of the individual being
subverted when he/she is expelled from the onstage world on the
grounds of political ideology. It is only in the final typology,
the conversion, that a conservative emblem is seen as directly
influenced by such martyrdom, and the audience is provided with an
actual example of political change. Thus, the study describes how
each typology builds on the construction of the previous, and all
generate from agitational propaganda.
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