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Haedicke, Susan – Theatre Topics, 1994
Addresses issues of power and diversity, and describes how the production team for Houston's play about Amerasian experience wrestled with the problem of "what is represented and who is authorized to represent it." Explains the reasons for the close attention to detail, and cites examples in which authenticity had to be sacrificed for…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Intercultural Communication, Japanese Culture, Production Techniques
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Levy, Jonathan – Theatre Topics, 2001
Argues that the further theatre studies moves away from its roots in the art and the business, the less valuable it is as an academic subject. Proposes that it is precisely in the historic tension between theatre departments and universities that theatre departments can best clarify their existence and goals. (PM)
Descriptors: Departments, Educational Objectives, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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Brockett, Oscar G. – Theatre Topics, 1994
Addresses the following censorship issues: (1) whether a group has the right to impose its world view on another group; (2) whether artistic visions which attack any group's values should be permitted; and (3) the limits of artistic freedom and who defines those limits. Cites examples from various plays through the years. (PA)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Censorship, Government Role, Higher Education
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Uno, Roberta – Theatre Topics, 1994
Analyzes the issue of censorship in relation to how it has influenced anti-apartheid South African playwright/director Mbongeni Ngema's theatrical style and the evolution of his style from the socio-political context in which he works. Illuminates the playwright's strategies for overcoming censorship. Discusses his most well-known work,…
Descriptors: Apartheid, Censorship, Cultural Context, Foreign Countries
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Able, Sam – Theatre Topics, 1994
Argues for the participation of theater programs in the development of a gay and lesbian curriculum. Predicts that gay and lesbian studies will soon take its place alongside existing cross-disciplinary programs in women's, African American, Native American, and other area studies. Presents examples of how to introduce gay studies into theater…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Homosexuality, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Bottoms, Stephen J. – Theatre Topics, 2003
Notes that in the popular imagination, theatre is still linked integrally and stereotypically with homosexuality. Discusses various critical debates of the 1960s about the linguistic and conceptual divorce of theatre and theatricality from performance and performativity. Concludes that if Theatre Studies has an enemy at all, it is in its own…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Educational Objectives, Higher Education, Homosexuality
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Fletcher, John – Theatre Topics, 2003
Contends that community-based theatre (CBT) can productively redefine the parameters of what "political performance" can mean. Draws on the work of community-based performance artist Tim Miller and on the author's experience as a dramaturg to suggest that artists and scholars must develop a revised idea of what constitutes activist democratic…
Descriptors: Activism, Community Involvement, Democracy, Performance
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Costa, Ann Marie; Green, Sharon; Haedicke, Susan; Mardirosian, Gail Humphries; Martin, Deborah; Schildcrout, Jordan; Spencer, Jenny; Weinberg, Mark – Theatre Topics, 2001
Records discussion of an arts advocacy roundtable began at the August 2000 meeting of the Association for Theatre in Higher Education and continued online. Explains how theatre departments have found themselves defending their very existence in the past decade. Includes discussions of the meaning of arts advocacy; how to incorporate arts advocacy…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Art Education, Departments, Higher Education
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Dickey, Jerry; Oliva, Judy Lee – Theatre Topics, 1994
States that undergraduate theater students typically approach their required courses in theater history with apprehension. Argues that, with the introduction of new methodologies in theater history, it is time to inspect the place of the survey course in the curriculum and to review the particular demands placed upon the teacher of theater…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Innovation, Required Courses, Teaching Methods
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Margolin, Deb – Theatre Topics, 2003
Contends that parody is the direct result of an attempt to make room for oneself within an airtight, closed, or exclusive social, cultural, or theatrical construct. Provides examples from the author's work, such as an all-women production of "Hamlet" as well as a parody of "The Glass Menagerie." (PM)
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Higher Education, Parody, Self Concept
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Kent, Assunta – Theatre Topics, 1994
States that performance activity is itself an experiential learning method which can contribute to other disciplines. Argues that "creative drama for social change" may not be a contradiction in terms. Chronicles the process through which the author and her coleader expanded a leadership "practicum" into an experiment by…
Descriptors: Creative Dramatics, Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Social Change
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Marra, Kim – Theatre Topics, 2003
Outlines the author's research and interest in the life and sexuality of Clyde Fitch, a successful yet historically obscure American playwright and sometime lover of Oscar Wilde. Explains that Fitch whets the author's hunger for more knowledge because of what he revealed about the reigning feminine ideal that he helped codify and that the author…
Descriptors: Femininity, Gender Issues, Higher Education, Learning Motivation
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Orr, Shelley – Theatre Topics, 2003
Describes the development of an introductory theater course which encourages students to fashion well-informed views of plays. Notes that the skills fostered in this course could start students on the road to becoming active, critically informed practitioners in whatever role they chose to take on in production. Explains that the course…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Introductory Courses
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Roost, Alisa – Theatre Topics, 2003
Describes the incorporation of writing into theater courses and ways of crafting engaging writing-intensive courses. Contends that in designing writing-intensive courses, theatre professors need to analyze the learning styles, strengths, and weaknesses of theatre majors. Concludes that writing can deepen students' learning experiences, encourage…
Descriptors: Creativity, Curriculum Development, Educational Objectives, Higher Education
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Kindelan, Nancy Anne – Theatre Topics, 2001
Surveys General Education program administrators. Finds that innovative General Education programs often disregard theatre arts courses. Encourages theatre faculty to consider the importance of their programs becoming more aggressively involved in curriculum reform. Proposes theatre studies can synthesize and personalize ideas across the…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Curriculum Development, Decision Making, Educational Strategies
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