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The Methuen Drama Handbook of Theatre History and Historiography (Methuen Drama Handbooks)

The Methuen Drama Handbook of Theatre History and Historiography (Methuen Drama Handbooks)

Current price: $220.00
Publication Date: October 31st, 2019
Publisher:
Methuen Drama
ISBN:
9781350034297
Pages:
392

Description

The Methuen Drama Handbook of Theatre History and Historiography is an authoritative guide to contemporary debates and practices in this field. The book covers the key themes and methods that are current in theatre history research, with a particular focus on expanding the object of study to include engagement with theatre and performance practices and the development of theatre histories around the world. Central to the book are eighteen specially commissioned essays by established and emerging scholars from a wide range of international contexts, whose discussion of individual case studies is predicated on their understanding and experience of their 'local' landscape of theatre history. These essays reveal where important work continues to be done in the field and, most valuably, draws on academic contexts beyond the Western academy to expand our knowledge of the exciting directions that such an approach opens up. Prefaced by an introduction tracing the development of the discipline of theatre history and changing historiographical approaches, the Handbook explores current issues pertaining to theatre and performance history research, as well as providing up to date and robust introductions to the methods and historiographic questions being explored by researchers in the field.

Featuring a series of essential research tools, including a detailed list of resources and an annotated bibliography of key texts, this is an indispensable scholarly handbook for anyone working in theatre and performance history and historiography.

About the Author

Claire Cochrane is Professor of Theatre Studies at the University of Worcester, UK. Jo Robinson is Professor of Drama and Performance at the University of Nottingham, UK. Together in 2016 they published the co-edited Theatre History and Historiography Ethics, Evidence and Truth. Both have published widely on the history of British theatre with a particular emphasis on the importance of expanding knowledge of the regional and local experience. Claire Cochrane's 2011 monograph Twentieth Century British Theatre Industry, Art and Empire mapped the social and economic factors which shaped theatre across the entire United Kingdom over a hundred year period. Hers was the first large-scale national history to chart the growing involvement of theatre artists of colour emerging from the communities of 'new' British formed from the international legacy of Empire. Jo Robinson's research focuses on the relationship between performance, place, community and region. In 2016 she published Theatre & The Rural. Her current work focuses on the potential for digital technologies to enable an enhanced engagement with theatre history and heritage.