The African American Theatrical Body :Reception, Performance, and the Stage
The African American Theatrical Body :Reception, Performance, and the Stage
hardback
Published:
6 October, 2011
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781107014381 |
| ISBN10 | 1107014387 |
| Number Of Pages | 344 |
| Item Weight | 680 g |
| Product Dimensions | 160 x 235 x 21 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | Cambridge University Press |
| Format | hardback |
Media Reviews
'This is a book of amazing historical scope and impressive critical imagination.' Harry J. Elam, Jr, Olive H. Palmer Professor in the Humanities, Stanford University
'In this bold and rigorous study, Soyica Colbert reveals the crucial reparative work of African American drama as a dynamic, collaborative site for responding to legacies of historical and material trauma. Through a series of lively and illuminating readings of works by Hansberry, Hurston and Hughes as well as Du Bois, Baldwin, Baraka, Wilson, and Parks, The African American Theatrical Body travels across a century of black performance in order to show how, time and again, black theater actively and radically manages and re-imagines space, time and movement for African American communities.' Daphne A. Brooks, Princeton University
Author's Bio
Soyica Colbert is an Assistant Professor of English at Dartmouth College. She is currently working on two book projects entitled Black Movements: Performance, Politics, and Migration and Lorraine Hansberry: Activist and Artist. She has published articles on James Baldwin, Alice Childress, August Wilson, Lynn Nottage and Suzan-Lori Parks. President of the Black Theater Association, Founder of the New England Black Scholars Collective and member of the Modern Language Association, the Association of Theater in Higher Education, the American Studies Association and the American Society of Theater Research, Colbert is the recipient of a Woodrow Wilson Foundation Career Enhancement Fellowship (2010–2011), Walter and Constance Burke Research Awards (2007 and 2010), a Stanford Humanities Postdoctoral Fellowship (2006–2007), a Mellon Summer Research Grant (2005) and the Robert W. Woodruff Library Fellowship (2005). Recent undergraduate classes include Black Theatre USA, Modern Black Literature, American Drama, Introduction to African American Studies, the Drama of August Wilson and Suzan-Lori Parks, Contemporary Playwrights of Color, and Race and Performance. Her research interests span the nineteenth to twenty-first centuries, from William Wells Brown to Beyoncé, and from poetics to performance.