Documentary Theatre and Performance
Andy Lavender author Mr Simon Shepherd editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:22nd Aug '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This volume addresses documentary as a mode of mediated performance, tracing its operations over the last hundred years as a vehicle for protest, persuasion, and different sorts of truth-telling.
What distinguishes documentary theatre from other forms of drama? How has it integrated different media across the years, and to what effect? What is its relationship to truth and reality, and defining moments of civic unrest and political change? In this short, authoritative book, Andy Lavender surveys a century of documentary theatre and performance and analyses key productions. Arranged in 3 sections that take a broadly chronological approach, the volume considers the nature of documenting, forms of intervention through theatre, the presentation of lived experience, and issues of truth, reality and representation. The book includes a variety of case studies, beginning with Piscator’s In Spite of Everything! (1925) and tracing the work that followed in Europe and America, including the tribunal and testimony plays of the 1990s and 2000s. It examines the relationship of 3 key productions to moments of civic and political crisis: Fires in the Mirror: Crown Heights Brooklyn and Other Identities (1992), Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 (1993) and The Colour of Justice: The Stephen Lawrence Enquiry (1999). Finally, it looks at the impact of digital technologies, social media and hybrid artforms in the 21st century, to explore the engagement of documentary performance with mediations and experiences of cultural change and shifting identities across a range of case studies.
This book not only introduces students to the history, theory and practice of documentary theatre in a style that is simple but never simplistic, but also invites teachers and researchers to reassess and expand their understanding of the form — a rare double feat. * Caroline Wake, UNSW Sydney, Australia *
This is a fine, enthralling and lucid investigation of documentary theatre, one that will appeal to scholars and practitioners alike. In his detailed study, Lavender analyses a range of international theatre productions and case studies, exploring the historical traditions of stage documentary as well as its contemporary iterations across varied sites of cultural production. Throughout, Lavender attends to the technological, political, aesthetic and experiential dimensions of documentary theatre and their mobilization at times of social crisis. A thought-provoking and resonant book. * Chris Megson, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK *
ISBN: 9781350137141
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
192 pages