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Performance in America : Contemporary U.S. Culture and the Performing Arts

Part of the Perverse Modernities: A Series Edited by Jack Halberstam and Lisa Lowe series
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Performance in America demonstrates the vital importance of the performing arts to contemporary U.S. culture. Looking at a series of specific performances mounted between 1994 and 2004, well-known performance studies scholar David Roman challenges the belief that theatre, dance, and live music are marginal art forms in the United States.

He describes the crucial role that the performing arts play in local, regional, and national communities, emphasizing the power of live performance, particularly its immediacy and capacity to create a dialogue between artists and audiences.

Roman draws attention to the ways that the performing arts provide unique perspectives on many of the most pressing concerns within American studies: questions about history and politics, citizenship and society, and culture and nation.

The performances that Roman analyzes range from localized community-based arts events to full-scale Broadway productions and from the controversial works of established artists such as Tony Kushner to those of emerging artists.

Roman considers dances that choreographers Bill T.Jones and Neil Greenberg produced in the mid-1990s as new AIDS treatments became available and the AIDS crisis was reconfigured; a production of the Asian American playwright Chaw Yew's A Beautiful Country in a high school auditorium in Los Angeles's Chinatown; and Latino performer John Leguizamo's one-man Broadway show Freak.

He examines the revival of theatrical legacies by female impersonators and the resurgence of cabaret in New York City.

Roman also looks at how the performing arts have responded to the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, and the second war in Iraq.

Including more than eighty illustrations, Performance in America highlights the dynamic relationships among performance, history, and contemporary culture through which the past is revisited and the future re-imagined.

David Roman is Professor of English and American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California.

He is the author of Acts of Intervention: Performance, Gay Culture, and AIDS and a co-editor of O Solo Homo: The New Queer Performance.

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Product Details
Duke University Press
0822336634 / 9780822336631
Paperback / softback
23/11/2005
United States
English
xx, 353 p. : ill.
23 cm
research & professional Learn More
Argues for the centrality of theatre and performance in the American national imaginary
Argues for the centrality of theatre and performance in the American national imaginary 1KBB USA, AS Dance & other performing arts, JFC Cultural studies, JFSK Gay & Lesbian studies