E-Book, Englisch, 281 Seiten, eBook
Coupe The Gender Politics of Contemporary Performance in Northern Ireland
1. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-3-031-75229-2
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, 281 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Contemporary Performance InterActions
ISBN: 978-3-031-75229-2
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
This book examines theatre and performance produced since the 1998 Belfast/Good Friday Agreement in the context of growing discontent with the failure of the peace in Northern Ireland to deliver genuinely transformative forms of social justice. The economic expansion that attended the peace accord propelled the growth of the region’s theatre and performance sector and assisted in increasing the representation of women and LGBTQ+ people across the arts. Despite this, much of the performance work produced since 1998 has illuminated the darker social consequences of Northern Ireland’s embrace of a specifically neoliberal vision of a ‘post-conflict’ society. Existing scholarship has already highlighted the role of theatre and performance in drawing attention to the misogyny and homophobia that has underwritten political antagonism in the North since partition. Instead, this book offers a sustained examination of contemporary performance makers that have engaged specifically with the reconstruction of gender norms amidst the region’s political and economic transformation. The story it tells is of an emerging current in theatre, performance art, and dance consisting of work concerned not only with uncovering the morbid symptoms of the neoliberal peace but also embodying those messy and everyday conditions of co-dependency, vulnerability and solidarity that both patriarchal nationalisms and androcentric individualism seek to deny.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Ch 1: Interdependent Inequalities & Inequalities of Dependency.- Ch 2: Troubled Masculinities: Theatre and the Uses and Abuses of Crisis.- Ch 3: Staging Grief and Grievance: Gender, Remembrance and Remembrance Agendas.- Ch 4: Stitched Up: Class and Compromise in Feminist Performance Making.- Ch 5: ‘It’s All Quite Ordinary’: Queering Normalisation in the ‘Post-Conflict’ City.- Ch 6: Resolutely Entangled: Performing Borders in the Shadow of Brexit.