Theatre and Performance in Eastern Europe
The Changing Scene
Herausgeber: Barnett, Dennis; Skelton, Arthur
Theatre and Performance in Eastern Europe
The Changing Scene
Herausgeber: Barnett, Dennis; Skelton, Arthur
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This is a collection of articles about contemporary theatre and performance history in Eastern Europe. It considers the ways the socio-political change has affected theatre and performance in countries such as Russia, the former Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and the former Yugoslavia, particularly after the break-up of the Soviet Union.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Amy BryzgelPerformance Art in Eastern Europe Since 1960116,99 €
20 Ground-Breaking Directors of Eastern Europe91,99 €
20 Ground-Breaking Directors of Eastern Europe91,99 €
Laurence Senelick (ed.)National Theatre in Northern and Eastern Europe, 1746 1900185,99 €
Anne GaschützScreening Eastern Europe32,99 €
Susan C. HaedickeContemporary Street Arts in Europe38,99 €
Martin BanhamAfrican Theatre 15: China, India & the Eastern World126,99 €-
-
-
This is a collection of articles about contemporary theatre and performance history in Eastern Europe. It considers the ways the socio-political change has affected theatre and performance in countries such as Russia, the former Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and the former Yugoslavia, particularly after the break-up of the Soviet Union.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Scarecrow Press
- Seitenzahl: 292
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 427g
- ISBN-13: 9780810860230
- ISBN-10: 0810860236
- Artikelnr.: 23082451
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Scarecrow Press
- Seitenzahl: 292
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 427g
- ISBN-13: 9780810860230
- ISBN-10: 0810860236
- Artikelnr.: 23082451
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Dennis Barnett is assistant professor of theatre at Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. He was a professional actor and director for nearly twenty years, and co-founded and directed Upstart Stage in Berkeley, California. Arthur Skelton is an associate researcher and the former senior lecturer in Drama at the Moray House Faculty of Education in the University of Edinburgh.
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Part 2 Introduction
Part 3 Part 1: Russia
Chapter 4 1. Power as Nostalgia: The Bolshoi Ballet in the New Russia
Chapter 5 2. A Little Orchestra of Hope: Sergei Artsybashev
Chapter 6 3. Boris Eifman's Theatre Enigma
Chapter 7 4. Oleg Tabakov at the Moscow Art Theatre: An Interview with
Alexander Popov
Part 8 Part 2: Poland
Chapter 9 5. Looking for Politics in All the Wrong Places: Teatr Wybrzee's
Educational Theatre Wybrazeak
Part 10 Part 3: Bulgaria
Chapter 11 6. Yordan Radichkov's Trying to Fly Against Aesthetic and
Political Canons
Chapter 12 7. Post-Totalitarian Bulgarian Theatre and Drama: Experimenters
and Literary Cinderallas
Part 13 Part 4: Romania
Chapter 14 8. The (R)evolution of Romanian Theatre
Part 15 Part 5: Former Czechoslovakia
Chapter 16 9. The Devil and Brezhnev's Eyebrows: Czech "Anti-fascist"
Theater after the Warsaw Pact Invasion
Chapter 17 10. Exiling Time: Czech Theatre's Post-Communist Struggle to
Reconcile Legacies with Change
Chapter 18 11. Nostalgia and Technology
Part 19 Part 6: Hungary
Chapter 20 12. Truth, Reality, and Illusion: Arpád Göncz and Hungarian
Medea
Chapter 21 13. Theatre in Hungary from Past to Pécs, 1984-2001
Part 22 Part 7: Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 23 14. Tales from the Wild East
Chapter 24 15. Old New Times: A Search for a Cultural Identity in the
Countries of the Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 25 16. Body in Context: Slovene Theatre at the End of the
Transition
Chapter 26 17. Croatian Theatre and the War 1992-1994
Chapter 27 18. Making a "MESS" Out of Misery: The Sarajevo International
Theatre Festival Ten Years After
Chapter 28 19. From the Myth of Artistic Independence to the Myth of
Artistic Engagement
Chapter 29 20. Between Engagement and Escapism
Chapter 30 21. Laughing Through the Changes: The Palliative Theatre of
Du?an Kovacevic
Chapter 31 22. The Role of the Artist in the Dark Times
Part 32 Appendix A: Selected Works of Boris Eifman
Part 33 Appendix B: Playwrights of the Post-Communist Czech Republic
Part 34 Appendix C: Sarajevo International Theatre Festival
Part 35 Appendix D: The Plays of Du?an Kovacevic
Part 36 Appendix E: DAH Theatre Performances
Part 37 Bibliography
Part 38 About the Editors and Contributors
Part 39 Index
Part 2 Introduction
Part 3 Part 1: Russia
Chapter 4 1. Power as Nostalgia: The Bolshoi Ballet in the New Russia
Chapter 5 2. A Little Orchestra of Hope: Sergei Artsybashev
Chapter 6 3. Boris Eifman's Theatre Enigma
Chapter 7 4. Oleg Tabakov at the Moscow Art Theatre: An Interview with
Alexander Popov
Part 8 Part 2: Poland
Chapter 9 5. Looking for Politics in All the Wrong Places: Teatr Wybrzee's
Educational Theatre Wybrazeak
Part 10 Part 3: Bulgaria
Chapter 11 6. Yordan Radichkov's Trying to Fly Against Aesthetic and
Political Canons
Chapter 12 7. Post-Totalitarian Bulgarian Theatre and Drama: Experimenters
and Literary Cinderallas
Part 13 Part 4: Romania
Chapter 14 8. The (R)evolution of Romanian Theatre
Part 15 Part 5: Former Czechoslovakia
Chapter 16 9. The Devil and Brezhnev's Eyebrows: Czech "Anti-fascist"
Theater after the Warsaw Pact Invasion
Chapter 17 10. Exiling Time: Czech Theatre's Post-Communist Struggle to
Reconcile Legacies with Change
Chapter 18 11. Nostalgia and Technology
Part 19 Part 6: Hungary
Chapter 20 12. Truth, Reality, and Illusion: Arpád Göncz and Hungarian
Medea
Chapter 21 13. Theatre in Hungary from Past to Pécs, 1984-2001
Part 22 Part 7: Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 23 14. Tales from the Wild East
Chapter 24 15. Old New Times: A Search for a Cultural Identity in the
Countries of the Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 25 16. Body in Context: Slovene Theatre at the End of the
Transition
Chapter 26 17. Croatian Theatre and the War 1992-1994
Chapter 27 18. Making a "MESS" Out of Misery: The Sarajevo International
Theatre Festival Ten Years After
Chapter 28 19. From the Myth of Artistic Independence to the Myth of
Artistic Engagement
Chapter 29 20. Between Engagement and Escapism
Chapter 30 21. Laughing Through the Changes: The Palliative Theatre of
Du?an Kovacevic
Chapter 31 22. The Role of the Artist in the Dark Times
Part 32 Appendix A: Selected Works of Boris Eifman
Part 33 Appendix B: Playwrights of the Post-Communist Czech Republic
Part 34 Appendix C: Sarajevo International Theatre Festival
Part 35 Appendix D: The Plays of Du?an Kovacevic
Part 36 Appendix E: DAH Theatre Performances
Part 37 Bibliography
Part 38 About the Editors and Contributors
Part 39 Index
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Part 2 Introduction
Part 3 Part 1: Russia
Chapter 4 1. Power as Nostalgia: The Bolshoi Ballet in the New Russia
Chapter 5 2. A Little Orchestra of Hope: Sergei Artsybashev
Chapter 6 3. Boris Eifman's Theatre Enigma
Chapter 7 4. Oleg Tabakov at the Moscow Art Theatre: An Interview with
Alexander Popov
Part 8 Part 2: Poland
Chapter 9 5. Looking for Politics in All the Wrong Places: Teatr Wybrzee's
Educational Theatre Wybrazeak
Part 10 Part 3: Bulgaria
Chapter 11 6. Yordan Radichkov's Trying to Fly Against Aesthetic and
Political Canons
Chapter 12 7. Post-Totalitarian Bulgarian Theatre and Drama: Experimenters
and Literary Cinderallas
Part 13 Part 4: Romania
Chapter 14 8. The (R)evolution of Romanian Theatre
Part 15 Part 5: Former Czechoslovakia
Chapter 16 9. The Devil and Brezhnev's Eyebrows: Czech "Anti-fascist"
Theater after the Warsaw Pact Invasion
Chapter 17 10. Exiling Time: Czech Theatre's Post-Communist Struggle to
Reconcile Legacies with Change
Chapter 18 11. Nostalgia and Technology
Part 19 Part 6: Hungary
Chapter 20 12. Truth, Reality, and Illusion: Arpád Göncz and Hungarian
Medea
Chapter 21 13. Theatre in Hungary from Past to Pécs, 1984-2001
Part 22 Part 7: Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 23 14. Tales from the Wild East
Chapter 24 15. Old New Times: A Search for a Cultural Identity in the
Countries of the Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 25 16. Body in Context: Slovene Theatre at the End of the
Transition
Chapter 26 17. Croatian Theatre and the War 1992-1994
Chapter 27 18. Making a "MESS" Out of Misery: The Sarajevo International
Theatre Festival Ten Years After
Chapter 28 19. From the Myth of Artistic Independence to the Myth of
Artistic Engagement
Chapter 29 20. Between Engagement and Escapism
Chapter 30 21. Laughing Through the Changes: The Palliative Theatre of
Du?an Kovacevic
Chapter 31 22. The Role of the Artist in the Dark Times
Part 32 Appendix A: Selected Works of Boris Eifman
Part 33 Appendix B: Playwrights of the Post-Communist Czech Republic
Part 34 Appendix C: Sarajevo International Theatre Festival
Part 35 Appendix D: The Plays of Du?an Kovacevic
Part 36 Appendix E: DAH Theatre Performances
Part 37 Bibliography
Part 38 About the Editors and Contributors
Part 39 Index
Part 2 Introduction
Part 3 Part 1: Russia
Chapter 4 1. Power as Nostalgia: The Bolshoi Ballet in the New Russia
Chapter 5 2. A Little Orchestra of Hope: Sergei Artsybashev
Chapter 6 3. Boris Eifman's Theatre Enigma
Chapter 7 4. Oleg Tabakov at the Moscow Art Theatre: An Interview with
Alexander Popov
Part 8 Part 2: Poland
Chapter 9 5. Looking for Politics in All the Wrong Places: Teatr Wybrzee's
Educational Theatre Wybrazeak
Part 10 Part 3: Bulgaria
Chapter 11 6. Yordan Radichkov's Trying to Fly Against Aesthetic and
Political Canons
Chapter 12 7. Post-Totalitarian Bulgarian Theatre and Drama: Experimenters
and Literary Cinderallas
Part 13 Part 4: Romania
Chapter 14 8. The (R)evolution of Romanian Theatre
Part 15 Part 5: Former Czechoslovakia
Chapter 16 9. The Devil and Brezhnev's Eyebrows: Czech "Anti-fascist"
Theater after the Warsaw Pact Invasion
Chapter 17 10. Exiling Time: Czech Theatre's Post-Communist Struggle to
Reconcile Legacies with Change
Chapter 18 11. Nostalgia and Technology
Part 19 Part 6: Hungary
Chapter 20 12. Truth, Reality, and Illusion: Arpád Göncz and Hungarian
Medea
Chapter 21 13. Theatre in Hungary from Past to Pécs, 1984-2001
Part 22 Part 7: Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 23 14. Tales from the Wild East
Chapter 24 15. Old New Times: A Search for a Cultural Identity in the
Countries of the Former Yugoslavia
Chapter 25 16. Body in Context: Slovene Theatre at the End of the
Transition
Chapter 26 17. Croatian Theatre and the War 1992-1994
Chapter 27 18. Making a "MESS" Out of Misery: The Sarajevo International
Theatre Festival Ten Years After
Chapter 28 19. From the Myth of Artistic Independence to the Myth of
Artistic Engagement
Chapter 29 20. Between Engagement and Escapism
Chapter 30 21. Laughing Through the Changes: The Palliative Theatre of
Du?an Kovacevic
Chapter 31 22. The Role of the Artist in the Dark Times
Part 32 Appendix A: Selected Works of Boris Eifman
Part 33 Appendix B: Playwrights of the Post-Communist Czech Republic
Part 34 Appendix C: Sarajevo International Theatre Festival
Part 35 Appendix D: The Plays of Du?an Kovacevic
Part 36 Appendix E: DAH Theatre Performances
Part 37 Bibliography
Part 38 About the Editors and Contributors
Part 39 Index







