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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Abingdon, Oxon ; : Routledge,
    UID:
    almahu_9949384127302882
    Format: 1 online resource (xx, 364 pages)
    ISBN: 9780203731055 , 0203731050 , 9781351399128 , 1351399128 , 135139911X , 9781351399111 , 9781351399104 , 1351399101
    Series Statement: Routledge theatre and performance companions
    Content: "The Routledge Companion to Theatre and Politics is a volume of critical essays, provocations, and interventions on the most important questions faced by today's writers, critics, audiences, theatre and performance makers. Featuring texts written by scholars and artists who are diversely situated (geographically, culturally, politically, and institutionally), its multiple perspectives broadly address the question 'How can we be political now?'. To respond to this question, Peter Eckersall and Helena Grehan have created eight galvanising themes as frameworks or rubrics to rethink the critical, creative, and activist perspectives on questions of politics and theatre: Post, Assembly, Gap, Institution, Machine, Message, End, and Re. These themes were developed in conversation with key thinkers and artists in the field, and the resulting texts engage with artistic works across a range of modes including traditional theatre, contemporary performance, public protest events, activism, and community and participatory theatre. Suitable for academics, performance makers, and students, The Routledge Companion to Theatre and Politics explores questions of how to be political in the early twenty-first century, by exploring how theatre and performance might provoke, unsettle, reinforce, or productively destabilise the status quo"--
    Note: A dramaturgy of cultural activism / Helena Grehan and Peter Eckersall -- Reflections upon the "post": towards a cultural history and a performance-oriented perspective / Andy Lavender -- Post-dictatorship Chilean theatre and the political imperative: Ictus' Esto (no) es un testamento / Jennifer Joan Thompson -- After the referendum: when the theatre tries to do "something" / Marilena Zaroulia -- Arab political theatre post-Arab Spring / Marvin Carlson -- Queer politics/nostalgia: performing the UpStairs Lounge fire of 1973 / Sean F. Edgecomb -- Contemporary theatre, the contemporary, and historicity / C.J.W.-L. Wee -- The vita perfumativa and post-dramatic, post-conceptual personae / Jon McKenzie -- Post-98 Indonesian theatre and performance: politics between a war of loudness and the dramaturgy of a silencer / Ugoran Prasad -- The theatre of posthuman immunity / João Florêncio -- Revolutionary trends at the South African National Arts Festival / Anton Krueger -- The cultural and political impact of post-migrant theatre in Germany / Azadeh Sharifi -- Staging post-democracy in State 1-4 by Rimini Protokoll / Imanuel Schipper -- Parsing the post: the post-political and its utility (or not) for performance / Janelle Reinelt -- Hosts of angels: climate guardians and quiet activism / Denise Varney -- Reflecting upon freedom with Meiro Koizumi / Shintaro Fujii -- An assembly of mourning: documentary theatre as a mode alternative historiography / Kai Tuchmann -- Assembly as community: politics and performance in late-twentieth- and early-twentieth-century Buenos Aires / Jean Graham-Jones -- Advocacy, allies, and "allies of convenience" in performance and performative protest / Bree Hadley -- From revolution to figuration: a genealogy of Philippine protest performances / Sir Anril Pineda Tiatco and Bryan Levina Viray -- The politics of care: play, stillness and social presence / Michael Balfour -- Assembling non-presence in the aborigine is present / Lara Stevens -- 100% Tokyo (2013) by Rimini Protokoll as a political forum by emancipated performers and audience members / Ken Hagiwara -- Lessons in revolting: a postdramatic theatre in Egypt / Areeg Ibrahim -- Obscene public speech / Tony Fisher -- Dogwhistle performance: concealing white supremacy in right-wing populism / Shannon Steen -- Arkadas kalabilir miyiz?/Can we remain friends? a reflection on the politics of land, performance and friendship / Özgül Akinci -- The construction of material referentiality in Chilean theatre: Los que van quedando en el camino (2010) / Milena Grass Kleiner -- To rest in the gap: possibilities for another politics through theatre / Jazmin Badong Llana -- "You are Bernarda": marginalised Roma women take on the main Spanish stages / Mara Valderrama -- Dancing in the gap / Rachael Swain -- Touring San Francisco's Chinatown: collective memories and peripatetic performance / Sean Metzger and Marike Splint -- "It's just not right": performing homelessness in Kalisolaite Uhila's Mo'ui tukuhausia / Emma Willis -- "Resisting production": the slow politics of theatre / Mark Fleishman -- The speculative collectivity of the global transnational, or, social practice and the international division of labour / Verónica Tello -- Acts of collaboration and disruption: notes on the asylum ballet Uropa / Solveig Gade -- The power of abuse / Jen Harvie -- Institutional aesthetics and the crisis of leadership / Christopher Balme -- The politics of teaching theatre / Glenn D'Cruz -- Going feral: queerly de-domesticating the institution (and running wild) / Alyson Campbell -- Artists versus the city: the curious story of the Jakarta Arts Council 1968-2017 / Helly Minarti -- Festival dramaturgy / Ong Keng Sen -- "100-days house": blackout as political action / Konstantina Georgelou -- The performative institution / Edward Scheer -- Punishment and chaos / David Pledger -- Maria Lucia Cruz Correia's urban action clinic garden: a political ecology with diplomats of dissensus and composite bodies engaged in intra-action / Christel Stalpaert -- Docile subjects: from theatres of automata to the machinery of twenty-first-century media / Evelyn Wan -- The human object in Oriza Hirata's I, worker and sayonara / Sarah Lucie -- Clarke and Dawe's mock interviews and the politics of duration / Yuji Sone -- Exposing the machinic present: Rimini Protokoll's theatre of operations / Timon Beyes -- Performances of exposure: Santiago Sierra's ethical interruptions / Gabriella Calchi Novati -- Void / Kristof van Baarle -- Performance in the biosphere: or, a theatre of things / Eddie Paterson -- How does the riot speak? / Sophie Nield -- The hopeless courage of confronting contemporary realities: Milo Rau's "globally conceived theatre of humanity" / Peter M. Boenisch -- Ibsen as method: critical theatre for the era of post-truth politics / Andrew Goldberg -- Facing fear: the radical reversal of narratives of risk / Sigrid Merx -- Form and violence: beyond theatrical content / Eero Laine -- The message is Maori: the politics of haka in performance / Nicola Hyland -- A theatre of the middle way: Buddhism, convictions, and social engagement in Burma/Myanmar / Matthew Yoxall -- Contemporary Chilean political theatre between opacity and propaganda: the case of Colectivo Zoologico's Dark / Fabián Escalona -- Flânerie of the mind: Beyene Haile's Asmara play as a dramaturgy of the street / Christine Matzke -- Acting on behalf of themselves: the theatrical politics of child's play / Bryoni Trezise -- End and interval / Joe Kelleher -- "Stage managing" ruins in Lebanon's borderlands / Ella Parry-Davies -- Striving, falling, performing: phenomenologies of mood and apocalypse / Peta Tait -- Plastic animals in praxes of metamorphosis / Eve Katsouraki -- Against staging apocalyptic disasters with butoh dance: Ohno Yoshito's Flower and bird/inside and outside / Hayato Kosuge -- Theatre and eschatological politics / Felipe Cevera -- Holstein's hair: the politics of decadence in the famous Lauren Barri Holstein's Splat! / Adam Alston -- Performance as infrastructure and institutional unlearnings / Gigi Argyropoulou -- Radically dead art in the beautiful end times / Peter Eckersall -- A Chinese catastrophe? the moving target of political theatre / Paul Rae -- Preserved by permafrost: reanimating and reimagining complexity in Canada's Klondike gold rush / Phoebe Rumsey -- The situated performative: considering the politics of the pause in performance / Alexa Taylor -- Between resistance and consensus: the mercurial dramaturgy of the necessary stage / Melissa Wansin Wong -- Open platforms for dialogue and difference: critical leadership in Singapore theatre / Charlene Rajendran -- Geomnemonic performance: activating political ontology through unsettled remains / Daphna Ben-Shaul -- Art, politics and the promise of rupture: reimagining the manifesto in an age of overflow / Helena Grehan -- Re-visit/re-examine/re-contextualise/re-ignite: protest and activism as performance / Sarah Ann Standing -- Evidencing slow making in one-to-one performance at the proximity festival / Renée Newman -- Re-inventing a political theatre in Burkina Faso / Heather Jeanne Denyer.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Routledge companion to theatre and politics. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019 ISBN 9781138303485
    Language: English
    Subjects: General works
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 2
    UID:
    almahu_9947376796802882
    Format: XVIII, 559 p. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9781137433084
    Content: This handbook is the first to provide a systematic investigation of the various roles of producers in commercial and not-for-profit musical theatre. Featuring fifty-one essays written by international specialists in the field, it offers new insights into the world of musical theatre, its creation and its promotion. Key areas of investigation include the lives and works of producers whose work is part of a US and worldwide musical theatre legacy, as well as the largely critically-neglected role of the musical theatre producer in the making, marketing, and performance of musicals. Also explored are the shifting roles of producers in musical theatre and their popular portrayals, offering a reader-friendly collection for fans, scholars, students, and practitioners of musical theatre alike.
    Note: Prologue -- 1. Overture; -- 2. Actors Act, Directors Direct, Producers…Produce?; Kathryn Edney -- Act 1. To the 1940s -- 3. Tony Pastor; Gillian Rodger -- 4. Adolf Philipp and the German-American Musical Comedy; John Koegel -- 5. George Edwardes; William A. Everett -- 6. Charles Frohman; Brian D. Valencia -- 7. Aggressive, Beleaguered, Commercial, Defiant; Marlis Schweitzer -- 8. Did the Shuberts Save Broadway?; Anthony Vickery -- 9. Sam Harris; Alisa Roost -- 10. Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.’s “Simple Idea”; Todd Decker -- 11. Feather-Footed Impresario; Maya Cantu -- 12. Alexander A. Aarons and Vinton Freedley; Jennifer Ashley Tepper and William A. Everett -- 13. Coherency; Dominic Symonds -- 14. Firm Foundations; Frank Van Straten.-15. Japanese Women’s Popular Musicals; Nobuko Anan -- Act 2. From the 1940s through the 1970s -- 16. Refining the Tastes of Broadway Audiences; Claudia Wilsch Case -- 17. More than a Producer; Paul R. Laird -- 18. Rodgers and Hammerstein; Valerie Joyce -- 19. The Nice One; Michael Schwartz -- 20. The Sparkplug and the Engineer; Dominic McHugh -- 21. Roger L. Stevens; Karen Patricia Heath -- 22. “He Could Get It for You Wholesale”; Ryan McKinney -- 23. Stuart Ostrow; Elissa Harbert -- 24. Hal Prince; Paul R. Laird -- 25. Korean Musical Theatre’s Past; Ji Hyon (Kayla) Yuh -- 26. Joseph Papp and the Public Theater; Elizabeth L. Wollman -- 27. Giora Godik; Shiraz Biggie -- 28. The West End (and Broadway) Head East; Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. -- Act 3. Since the 1970s -- 29. The Shubert Organization; Mark E. Swartz -- 30. Emanuel Azenberg's Life in Theatre; Sarah Taylor Ellis -- 31. Cameron Mackintosh; Jessica Sternfeld -- 32. Laying Down the RUG; Kyle A. Thomas -- 33. “My American Dream”; Sir Anril Tiatco -- 34. Trading Globally in Austrian History; Laura MacDonald -- 35. Stage Entertainment’s Global Success; Sanne Thierens -- 36. West Side Story; Doug Reside -- 37. Making Musicals that Matter; Donatella Galella -- 38. Broadway Bound; Claudia Case -- 39. Our Brand Is Revival; Bryan M. Vandevender -- 40. Reclaiming, Restoring, and Reviving the American Musical; Bryan M. Vandevender -- 41. Garth Drabinsky’s “Grand Moves”; Todd Decker -- 42. Disney Theatrical Productions; Amy S. Osatinski -- 43. Against All Odds; Chris McCoy -- 44. “I am them”; Rashida Shaw -- 45. Between Broadway and the Local; Hyunjung Lee -- 46. Performing Like a Concert King or a Queen; Sir Anril Tiatco -- 47. Producing Musicals in Russia at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century; Art Babayants -- 48. David Stone; David Carlyon -- 49. ART for ART’s Sake; Stuart Hecht -- 50. Roth and Son; Laura MacDonald.-Curtain Call -- 51. New Paradigms for Broadway Producers in Popular Culture and Beyond; Mary Jo Lodge -- Biblibography -- Index.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781137440297
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_872090574
    Format: xiv, 149 pages , Illustrationen , 23 cm
    ISBN: 9789715427999
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 133-141) and index , In English
    Language: English
    Keywords: Philippinen ; Katholizismus ; Theater ; Religiöses Drama
    Author information: Tiatco, Sir Anril Pineda
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  • 4
    Book
    Book
    Diliman, Quezon City : University of the Philippines Press
    UID:
    gbv_825674026
    Format: xii, 209 pages , 23 cm
    ISBN: 9789715427609
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 185-200) and index , In English
    Language: English
    Keywords: Theater ; Aufführung ; Philippinen
    Author information: Tiatco, Sir Anril Pineda
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bern : Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
    UID:
    almahu_9948665268302882
    Format: 1 online resource (248 p.) , 8 ill. , 22,5 x 15,5 cm
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9783034327220
    Content: This book proposes entanglement as a useful idiom for understanding the contemporary Manila theatre. Drawing on its Tagalog counterpart, buhol-buhol, entanglement is conceived not only as a juxtaposition among elements, but also as a process of muddling and snaring. Taken together, these affirm the entangled character of contemporary Manila theatre in overlapping representations, histories, relationships and genres, while at the same time marking some problematic limitations in the treatment of chosen subjects by Manilan artists. The reason for this is that while these entanglements render Manila theatre far more complex than the accusations of mimicry and inauthenticity frequently leveled at Filipino culture, artists are often caught up in a more intractable buhol-buhol than they are willing or able to recognize. Four figures of buhol-buhol are identified in this book: pista (fiesta), kapuluan (archipelago), patibong (trap), and nangingibang-bayan (overseas-worker). In conceptualizing these figures of entanglement, the discussions start by illustrating their materiality and performativity before proceeding to reflections about how these are directed towards the complexity of Manila theatre.
    Note: Chapter 1: Introduction: Conceiving Entanglement in the Vernacular – Chapter 2: Pista – Chapter 3: Kapuluan – Chapter 4: Patibong – Chapter 5: Nangingibang-Bayan – Chapter 6: Conclusion – Notes – Works Cited
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783034327213
    Language: English
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1726007952
    Format: xv, 294 Seiten , Illustrationen , 22 cm
    ISBN: 9783030346850 , 3030346854
    Series Statement: Contemporary performance interactions
    Content: 1. Politics, performance, the contemporary and Southeast Asia / Marcus Cheng Chye Tan and Charlene Rajendran -- 2. 'Yesterday's dreams, tomorrow's promise': performing a pan-ASEAN archipelagic identity at age 50 / William Peterson and Reagan Romero Maiquez -- 3. 'Pornography disguised as art': bare/d bodies, biopolitics and multicultural tolerance in Singapore / Marcus Cheng Chye Tan -- 4. Baling in a time of BERSIH: embodying historical transcripts as enactments of resistance / Charlene Rajendran -- 5. Staging the banality of social evil : Faust and/in Philippine contemporary social politics / Sir Anril Pineda Tiatco -- 6. A transformative theatre of dialogue: the Makhampom theatre group's negotiation of Thailand's Likay (Theatre) state / Richard Barber and Pongjit Saphakhun -- 7. Intervention, openness and ownership: interview with Ong Keng Sen on festival dramaturgy / Charlene Rajendran -- 8. Wayang kontemporer: the politics of sponsorship and innovation / Miguel Escobar Varela -- 9. Authenticity and contemporary musical theatre in Thailand / Wankwan Polachan -- 10. Bangsokol: A requiem for Cambodia-the politics of memory and an aesthetics of remembrance / Marcus Cheng Chye Tan -- 11. The wheres and whys of Southeast Asia: art and performance in the locating of Southeast Asia today / Farish A. Noor.
    Content: "Performing Southeast Asia examines contemporary performance practices and their relationship with politics and governance in Southeast Asia in the twenty-first century. In a region haunted historically by strongman politics, authoritarianism and militarism, religious tension and ethnic strife, the chapters reveal how contemporary theatre and performances in the present reflect yet challenge dominant socio-political discourses. The authors analyse works of political commitment and conviction, created and performed by Southeast Asian artists, as modes and platforms of reaction and resistance to the shifting political climates that inform contemporary life in urban Southeast Asia. The discussions center on issues of state hegemonies and biopolitics, finance and sponsorship, social liberalism and conservatism, the relevance of history and tradition, and globalisation and cultural practice. These diverse yet related concerns converge on an examination of the efficacies of theatre and performance as means of political intervention and transformation that point to alternative embodiments of political consciousness through which artists propose critical options for rethinking the state, citizenship, identity and belonging in a time of seismic socio-political change. The editors also reframe an understanding of 'the contemporary' not simply as a temporal adjective but, in the context of present Southeast Asia, as a geopolitical condition that shapes artistic and performance practices." -- Publisher's website
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783030346867
    Language: English
    Subjects: General works
    RVK:
    Keywords: Theater ; Tanz ; Politik ; Gesellschaft ; Südostasien
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing :
    UID:
    almahu_9948352056302882
    Format: XVI, 250 p. 19 illus. , online resource.
    Edition: 1st ed. 2020.
    ISBN: 9783030394110
    Series Statement: Transnational Theatre Histories
    Content: Aviation extended the horizon of international touring across Asia and the Pacific in the 1950s and 1960s. Nightclubs in Hong Kong, Manila, Melbourne, Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo, and Taipei presented an international array of touring acts. This book investigates how this happened. It explores the post-war formation of the Asia Pacific region through international touring and the transformation of entertainment during the 'jet age' of aviation. Drawing on archival research across the region, Bollen investigates how touring variety forged new relations between artists, audiences, and nations. Mapping tours and tracing networks by connecting fragments, he reveals how versatile artists translated repertoire in circulation as they toured, and how entrepreneurial endeavours harnessed the production of national distinction to government agendas. He argues that touring variety on commercial circuits diversified the repertoire in regional circulation, anticipating the diversity emerging in state-sanctioned multiculturalisms, and driving the government-construction of national theatres for cultural diplomacy. Long before the Asian-intercultural theatre wave of the 1980s, Jonathan Bollen's deeply researched study shows how touring variety acts and cabaret shows were already remaking the political and cultural economies of the Asia-Pacific. Bollen's socio-historical analysis explores variety in the Cold War era of popular music, accessible jet travel, live television, and the paradoxical dynamics of racialized containment policies and economic expansionism. Peter Eckersall, The Graduate Center CUNY, USA. Variety theatre, cabaret and dance flourished in the renovated industries of postwar commercial entertainment. From Melbourne to Manila and Tokyo, comics, musicians, and dancers informed popular imaginaries in nightclubs, stage spectaculars, radio, and television. These excitingly mobile cultural energies were also key agents of popular Cold War diplomacy in the region, and Bollen's ground-breaking study shows how television, the civilian aeroplane, and the cruise liner all became cultural 'containers' delivering to the various peoples of the Asia Pacific region the thrills of modern cosmopolitan tourism. Veronica Kelly, FAHA, University of Queensland, Australia. Bollen provides fresh and original insights on issues of migration, exile, and place-making in music, popular entertainment, and performance. Interweaving the intricate narratives of artists from the Asia Pacific region in the 1950s and the 1960s, Bollen also directs us to reflect on how 'touring variety' in the mid-twentieth century reverberates in the present. ... This is a must-read, not only for theatre and performance scholars, but also for historians, ethnomusicologists, and researchers in the area and cultural studies. Sir Anril Pineda Tiatco, University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines.
    Note: 1. Chapter 1: Introduction -- 2. Chapter 2: Transporting Variety through the Nightclubs of Hong Kong -- 3. Chapter 3: Translating Repertoire between Melbourne and Manila -- 4. Chapter 4: The Tourist Trade: Flying in to Singapore, 1946-1975 -- 5. Chapter 5: Entrepreneurial Diplomacy: The Cherry Blossom Show on tour from Tokyo -- 6. Chapter 6: Encountering Internationalism on the Circuit around Sydney -- 7. Chapter 7: Containing Diversity: National Distinction and International Style -- 8. Chapter 8: Conclusion.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783030394103
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783030394127
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783030394134
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer International Publishing | Cham : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan
    UID:
    gbv_1699185859
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource(XVI, 250 p. 19 illus.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2020.
    ISBN: 9783030394110
    Series Statement: Transnational Theatre Histories
    Content: 1. Chapter 1: Introduction -- 2. Chapter 2: Transporting Variety through the Nightclubs of Hong Kong -- 3. Chapter 3: Translating Repertoire between Melbourne and Manila -- 4. Chapter 4: The Tourist Trade: Flying in to Singapore, 1946–1975 -- 5. Chapter 5: Entrepreneurial Diplomacy: The Cherry Blossom Show on tour from Tokyo -- 6. Chapter 6: Encountering Internationalism on the Circuit around Sydney -- 7. Chapter 7: Containing Diversity: National Distinction and International Style -- 8. Chapter 8: Conclusion.
    Content: Aviation extended the horizon of international touring across Asia and the Pacific in the 1950s and 1960s. Nightclubs in Hong Kong, Manila, Melbourne, Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo, and Taipei presented an international array of touring acts. This book investigates how this happened. It explores the post-war formation of the Asia Pacific region through international touring and the transformation of entertainment during the ‘jet age’ of aviation. Drawing on archival research across the region, Bollen investigates how touring variety forged new relations between artists, audiences, and nations. Mapping tours and tracing networks by connecting fragments, he reveals how versatile artists translated repertoire in circulation as they toured, and how entrepreneurial endeavours harnessed the production of national distinction to government agendas. He argues that touring variety on commercial circuits diversified the repertoire in regional circulation, anticipating the diversity emerging in state-sanctioned multiculturalisms, and driving the government-construction of national theatres for cultural diplomacy. Long before the Asian-intercultural theatre wave of the 1980s, Jonathan Bollen’s deeply researched study shows how touring variety acts and cabaret shows were already remaking the political and cultural economies of the Asia-Pacific. Bollen’s socio-historical analysis explores variety in the Cold War era of popular music, accessible jet travel, live television, and the paradoxical dynamics of racialized containment policies and economic expansionism. Peter Eckersall, The Graduate Center CUNY, USA. Variety theatre, cabaret and dance flourished in the renovated industries of postwar commercial entertainment. From Melbourne to Manila and Tokyo, comics, musicians, and dancers informed popular imaginaries in nightclubs, stage spectaculars, radio, and television. These excitingly mobile cultural energies were also key agents of popular Cold War diplomacy in the region, and Bollen’s ground-breaking study shows how television, the civilian aeroplane, and the cruise liner all became cultural ‘containers’ delivering to the various peoples of the Asia Pacific region the thrills of modern cosmopolitan tourism. Veronica Kelly, FAHA, University of Queensland, Australia. Bollen provides fresh and original insights on issues of migration, exile, and place-making in music, popular entertainment, and performance. Interweaving the intricate narratives of artists from the Asia Pacific region in the 1950s and the 1960s, Bollen also directs us to reflect on how ‘touring variety’ in the mid-twentieth century reverberates in the present. … This is a must-read, not only for theatre and performance scholars, but also for historians, ethnomusicologists, and researchers in the area and cultural studies. Sir Anril Pineda Tiatco, University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783030394103
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783030394127
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783030394134
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9783030394103
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9783030394127
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9783030394134
    Language: English
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer International Publishing | Cham : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan
    UID:
    gbv_1691533467
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource(XV, 294 p. 8 illus.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2020.
    ISBN: 9783030346867
    Series Statement: Contemporary Performance InterActions
    Content: 1. Politics, Performance, the Contemporary and Southeast Asia; Marcus Cheng Chye Tan and Charlene Rajendran -- 2. ‘Yesterday’s Dreams, Tomorrow’s Promise’: Performing a Pan-ASEAN Archipelagic Identity at Age 50; William Peterson and Reagan Romero Maiquez -- 3. ‘Pornography Disguised as Art’: Bare/d Bodies, Biopolitics and Multicultural Tolerance in Singapore; Marcus Cheng Chye Tan -- 4. ABaling in a Time of BERSIH: Embodying Historical Transcripts as Enactments of Resistance; Charlene Rajendran -- 5. Staging the Banality of Social Evil: Faust and/in Philippine Contemporary Social Politics; Sir Anril Pineda Tiatco -- 6. A Transformative Theatre of Dialogue: The Makhampom Theatre Group’s Negotiation of Thailand’s Likay (Theatre) State; Richard Barber and Pongjit Saphakhun -- 7. Intervention, Openness and Ownership: Interview with Ong Keng Sen on Festival Dramaturgy; Charlene Rajendran -- 8. Wayang kontemporer: The Politics of Sponsorship and Innovation; Miguel Escobar Varela -- 9. Authenticity and Contemporary Musical Theatre in Thailand; Wankwan Polachan -- 10.Bangsokol: A Requiem for Cambodia—The Politics of Memory and an Aesthetics of Remembrance; Marcus Cheng Chye Tan -- 11. The Wheres and Whys of Southeast Asia: Art and Performance in the Locating of Southeast Asia Today; Farish A. Noor.
    Content: Performing Southeast Asia: Performance, Politics and the Contemporary is an important reconsideration of the histories and practices of theatre and performance in a fluid and dynamic region that is also experiencing an overarching politics of complexity, precarity and populist authoritarian tendencies. In a substantial introductory essay and essays by leading scholars, activists and practitioners working inside the region, the book explores fundamental questions for the arts. The book asks how theatre contributes to and/or addresses the political condition in the contemporary moment, how does it represent the complexity of experiences in peoples’ daily lives and how does theatre engage in forms of political activism and enable a diversity of voices to flourish. The book shows how, in an age of increasingly violent politics, political institutions become sites for bad actors and propaganda. Forces of biopolitics, neo-liberalism and religious and ethnic nationalism intersect in unpredictable ways with decolonial practices – all of which the book argues are forces that define the contemporary moment. Indeed, by putting the focus on contemporary politics in the region alongside the diversity of practices in contemporary theatre, we see a substantial reformation of the idea of the contemporary moment, not as a cosmopolitan and elite artistic practice but as a multivalent agent of change in both aesthetic and political terms. With its focus on community activism and the creative possibilities of the performing arts the region, Performing Southeast Asia, is a timely intervention that brings us to a new understanding of how contemporary Southeast Asia has become a site of contest, struggle and reinvention of the relations between the arts and society. Peter Eckersall The Graduate Center City University of New York Performing Southeast Asia – with chapters concerned with how regional theatres seek contextually-grounded, yet post-national(istic) forms; how history and tradition shape but do not hold down contemporary theatre; and how, in the editors’ words, such artistic encounters could result in theatres ‘that do not merely attend to matters of cultural heritage, tradition or history, but instead engage overtly with theatre and performance in the contemporary’ – contributes to the possibility of understanding what options for an artistically transubstantiated now-ness may be: to the possibility, that is, of what might be called a ‘Present-Tense Theatre’. C. J. W.-L. Wee Professor of English Nanyang Technological University Performing Southeast Asia examines contemporary performance practices and their relationship with politics and governance in Southeast Asia in the twenty-first century. In a region haunted historically by strongman politics, authoritarianism and militarism, religious tension and ethnic strife, the chapters reveal how contemporary theatre and performances in the present reflect yet challenge dominant socio-political discourses. The authors analyse works of political commitment and conviction, created and performed by Southeast Asian artists, as modes and platforms of reaction and resistance to the shifting political climates that inform contemporary life in urban Southeast Asia. The discussions center on issues of state hegemonies and biopolitics, finance and sponsorship, social liberalism and conservatism, the relevance of history and tradition, and globalisation and cultural practice. These diverse yet related concerns converge on an examination of the efficacies of theatre and performance as means of political intervention and transformation that point to alternative embodiments of political consciousness through which artists propose critical options for rethinking the state, citizenship, identity and belonging in a time of seismic socio-political change. The editors also reframe an understanding of ‘the contemporary’ not simply as a temporal adjective but, in the context of present Southeast Asia, as a geopolitical condition that shapes artistic and performance practices.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783030346850
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783030346874
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783030346881
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9783030346850
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9783030346874
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9783030346881
    Language: English
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_1752321928
    ISSN: 1096-0023
    Content: ANRIL, SNPs, C-reactive protein (CRP), Low-density lipoprotein (LDL), Severe periodontitis
    In: Cytokine, Oxford [u.a.] : Elsevier, 1989, 127(2020), Seite 154932, 1096-0023
    In: volume:127
    In: year:2020
    In: pages:154932
    Language: English
    Author information: Schlitt, Axel 1966-
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