Questions about how theater history should be taught have in recent years provoked passionate discussions. Some scholars have argued that the emerging discipline of performance studies should replace theater history altogether. On the other side of the debate, traditional theater historians have sometimes rejected performance studies analyses as unsatisfactorily diffuse and less than rigorous. Showcasing the work of scholars conducting innovative and compelling research in theater history, Theater Historiography collects original essays that probe key methodological questions about interdisciplinarity, postcolonialism, the archive, and digital technology. The result is a volume that features a cohesiveness of theme and purpose while encompassing a range of approaches, historic periods, geographical areas, and performance genres. Taken together, the essays demonstrate the synergistic relationship between theater history and performance studies. Though the two fields have often seemed to be in conflict, the scholarship presented here draws freely on the methods and terminologies of both disciplines, showing that the critical intersection between theater history and performance studies is not just desirable, but inevitable.
About the AuthorHenry Bial is Assistant Professor of Theatre, University of New Mexico. He is editor of The Performance Studies Reader and co-editor of Brecht Sourcebook
Book InformationISBN 9780472051335
Author Henry BialFormat Paperback
Page Count 352
Imprint The University of Michigan PressPublisher The University of Michigan Press
Weight(grams) 441g