Performances of Violence

Performances of Violence
Title Performances of Violence PDF eBook
Author Austin Sarat
Publisher
Pages 188
Release 2011
Genre Law
ISBN

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An interdisciplinary analysis of the cultural meanings of violence

Violence Performed

Violence Performed
Title Violence Performed PDF eBook
Author P. Anderson
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Pages 0
Release 2008-11-18
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 9780230298392

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This topical collection explores the relationship between violence and performance. The authors offer fresh theoretical perspectives and examine media as diverse as street theatre, performance art, photography and cinema in locations as diverse as Korea and South Africa to India and Israel.

Metatheatrical Dramaturgies of Violence

Metatheatrical Dramaturgies of Violence
Title Metatheatrical Dramaturgies of Violence PDF eBook
Author Emma Willis
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 231
Release 2021-11-08
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 3030851028

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This book examines a series of contemporary plays where writers put theatre itself on stage. The texts examined variously dramatize how theatre falls short in response to the demands of violence, expose its implication in structures of violence—including racism and gender-based violence—and illustrate how it might effectively resist violence through reconfiguring representation. Case studies, which include Jackie Sibblies Drury’s We Are Proud to Present and Fairview, Ella Hickson’s The Writer and Tim Crouch’s The Author, provide a range of practice-based perspectives on the question of whether theatre is capable of accounting for and expressing the complexities of structural and interpersonal violence as both lived in the body and borne out in society. The book will appeal to scholars and artists working in the areas of violence, theatre and ethics, witnessing, memory and trauma, spectatorship and contemporary dramaturgy, as well as to those interested in both the doubts and dreams we have about the role of theatre in the twenty-first century.

The Violence of Law

The Violence of Law
Title The Violence of Law PDF eBook
Author Jens Meierhenrich
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 769
Release 2024-04-30
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1108675573

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'Lawfare' describes the systematic use and abuse of legal procedure for political ends. This provocative book examines this insufficiently understood form of warfare in post-genocide Rwanda, where it contributed to the making of dictatorship. Jens Meierhenrich provides a redescription of Rwanda's daring experiment in transitional justice known as inkiko gacaca. By dissecting the temporally and structurally embedded mechanisms and processes by which change agents in post-genocide Rwanda manoeuvred to create modified legal arrangements of things past, Meierhenrich reveals an unexpected jurisprudence of violence. Combining nomothetic and ideographic reasoning, he shows that the deformation of the gacaca courts – and thus the rise of lawfare in post-genocide Rwanda – was not preordained but the outcome of a violently structured contingency. The Violence of Law tells a disturbing tale and will appeal to scholars, advanced students, and practitioners of international and comparative law, African studies and human rights.

Violent Acts

Violent Acts
Title Violent Acts PDF eBook
Author Severino João Medeiros Albuquerque
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Pages 306
Release 1991
Genre Latin American drama
ISBN 9780814322444

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Albuquerque analyzes the use of violence in Latin American theatre from the 1950s through the 1980s. He argues that in the face of repression and torture, some playwrights counter victimization with art as urgent as street confrontation. A study from both Spanish and Portuguese-speaking countries. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Theatre and Violence

Theatre and Violence
Title Theatre and Violence PDF eBook
Author Lucy Nevitt
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 80
Release 2013-07-12
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 1350316334

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If violence is a terrible thing, why do we watch it? Nevitt explores the use of violence in theatre and its effect on spectators. Critically engaging with examples of stage combat, rape, terrorism, wrestling and historical re-enactments, she argues that studying violence through theatre can be part of a desire to create a more peaceful world.

The Voice of Violence

The Voice of Violence
Title The Voice of Violence PDF eBook
Author Joel P. Rhodes
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Pages 238
Release 2001-04-30
Genre History
ISBN 0313075506

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The tide of 1960s political upheaval, while mistaken at the time by some as a unified assault against America carried out by revolutionaries at home and abroad, was actually hundreds of locally constructed expressions of political discourse, reflecting the influences of race, class, gender, and local conditions on each unique group of practitioners. This is a comparative study of how radicals at the local level staged, displayed, and ultimately narrated symbolic acts of performative violence against the symbols of the American system. The term performative violence refers to a method of public protest whereby participants create the conditions in which their violent actions become a political text, a powerful symbol with a strong historical precedent. Recognizing the textuality of history, this interdisciplinary examination deconstructs the performative violence within its historically specific and socially constructed contexts using four representative case histories of late 1960s and early 1970s activism. These are the African-American rioters in Kansas City, the Black Panther Party in Detroit, campus radicals at Kansas State University, and activists at the University of Kansas. Rather than focusing on the major clashes of the Vietnam era, this book contributes to recent scholarship on the 1960s which has attempted to offer a more textured analysis of the era's activism, particularly its political violence, based on more local studies.