Tag: Edinburgh

The Edinburgh Companion to Modernism in Contemporary Theatre Ed 208


Free Download Adrian Curtin, "The Edinburgh Companion to Modernism in Contemporary Theatre Ed 208"
English | ISBN: 1474495044 | 2023 | 488 pages | PDF | 20 MB
Instead of treating modernism principally as a thing of the past, this volume highlights modernism as an impulse that can be carried forward to the present, re-embodied and re-encountered in theatrical performance. It demonstrates how modernist impulses spark contemporary theatre in electric and dynamic ways, continuing the modernist imperative to ‘make it new’ and to engage meaningfully with the complicated situation of living in the contemporary world. Through a diverse set of contributions from scholars and theatre practitioners, this book examines the legacy of modernism on the world stage in acts of remembrance, restaging, transmission and slippage. It investigates both well-known and less familiar aspects of modernist theatre history, engaging topics such as the revival of the first Black American musical, feminist and disability-led reinterpretations of canonical modernist plays, the use of modernist-inspired performance practice in contemporary university arts education and the continually contested meaning and importance of the avant-garde.

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Italian Gothic An Edinburgh Companion (Edinburgh Companions to the Gothic)


Free Download Italian Gothic: An Edinburgh Companion (Edinburgh Companions to the Gothic) by Marco Malvestio, Stefano Serafini
English | March 17, 2023 | ISBN: 1474490166 | 264 pages | PDF | 5.45 Mb
This companion constitutes the first, systematic theorisation of the Italian Gothic. Through an interdisciplinary, trans-medial approach that encompasses prose fiction, poetry, journalism, film, music, and comics, it explores the varied and complex metamorphoses of the Gothic in Italy from the late eighteenth century to the present day. Although the last thirty years have seen a burgeoning in the academic study of the Gothic at college and university levels and in related publications, scholars have long struggled to even acknowledge the very existence of this mode in the Italian context. This companion does not only fill in a historical and critical gap in the scholarship, but it also contributes to revitalising the field of Gothic Studies, opening new channels of communication, and paving the way to the exploration of the fruitful interchanges between Italian and other European and American configurations of the Gothic.

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