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African Theatre 15: China, India & the Eastern World [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 496 g, 5 b/w illus.
  • Sari: African Theatre
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: James Currey
  • ISBN-10: 1847011462
  • ISBN-13: 9781847011466
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 496 g, 5 b/w illus.
  • Sari: African Theatre
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: James Currey
  • ISBN-10: 1847011462
  • ISBN-13: 9781847011466
Teised raamatud teemal:
Extends the study of China's "soft power" into theatre studies and looks more widely at syncretic traditions evolving in other long-term historic exchanges between Asia and Africa.

2016 Thalia Prize of the International Association of Theatre Critics

China is the main focus of this volume, and articles consider the way it is using "soft power" in its extensive engagement with South Africa, and, through its support for theatre festivals, with Lusophone countries in Africa. China's involvement with the construction of theatres, opera houses and cultural facilities as part of its foreign aid programmes in such countries as Algeria, Cameroon, Mauritius, Ghana and Senegal, provides the background to the playscript from this volume, Blickakte (Acts of Viewing) by Daniel Schauf, Philipp Scholtysik & Jonas Alsleben, that explores Chinese impact in Somalia. Issues also emerge around what China is "importing" culturally fromAfrica. In 2012, Soyinka's The Lion & the Jewel was produced there, and a season of Fugard's work was enjoyed in Beijing during 2014. During 2016 Brett Bailey's Macbeth Opera will be performed in Macao.

In recent years courses in African theatre have been started in Beijing by Biodun Jeyifo, and also taught by Femi Osofisan whose well-known Esu and the Vagabond Minstrels and Once Upon Four Robbers have been translatedinto Mandarin, along with Soyinka's The Lion & the Jewel. The volume also includes contributions on exchanges between other Asian countries and Africa such as articles on the production of African plays in Bangladesh and onthe persistence of African performance traditions among African migrants in India. Attention is paid to the syncretic theatre traditions that have evolved wherever African and Asian populations have been in close and extended contact, as in Mauritius and Durban. Unusual exchanges and globalized theatre surfaces in the course of the volume. For example, while the Guangdong Provincial Puppet Art Theatre Group performed at the 41st Grahamstown Festival (2015), Chinese puppeteers are being trained to manipulate the War Horse for a Beijing production.

Volume Editors: JAMES GIBBS & FEMI OSOFISAN FEMI OSOFISAN Thalia Laureate of the International Association of TheatreCritics 2016

Series Editors: Martin Banham, Emeritus Professor of Drama & Theatre Studies, University of Leeds; James Gibbs, Senior Visiting Research Fellow, University of the West of England; Femi Osofisan, Professor ofDrama, University of Ibadan; Jane Plastow, Professor of African Theatre, University of Leeds; Yvette Hutchison, Associate Professor, Department of Theatre & Performance Studies, University of Warwick.
Notes on Contributors ix
Obituaries xv
Hamadnallah Abdulgadir
Khalid Al Mubarak
F. Nii-Yartey
James Gibbs
Christopher F. Kamlongera
James Gibbs
Introduction xxiii
James Gibbs
1 Africa's Discovery of China's Theatre
1(60)
China in Ghana An interview with Mohammed Ben Abdallah about the National Theatre, built in Accra by the Chinese government
AWO Mana Asiedu (interviewer); Introduced & annotated by James Gibbs
3(25)
The Orphan of Chao
A Chinese play at a Nigerian university 1979
28(3)
Tony Humphries
Introducing Blickakte -- `Acts of Viewing'
`Do I See What I See, Do I Know What I Know, Do I Hear What I Hear...'
31(10)
Christine Matzke
Play script
Blickakte -- `Acts of Viewing'. Based on an idea by Ahmed Jama Aden scripted & developed by Daniel Schauf, Philipp Scholtysik & Jonas Alsleben (video)
41(20)
2 China's Discovery of Africa: Texts, festivals & buildings
61(74)
Theatre in China in 1965, with a focus on War Drums Along the Equator
An Interview with Robert Bolt with an introduction fey James Gibbs
63(9)
The Post-Colonial Imaginary & Politics of Representation in the Macao SAR
The Teatrau & the (re)emergence of `lusqfonia' under Chinese stars
Isabel Maria Da Costa Morais
72(19)
China-Africa Relations at the Mindelact Theatre
Festival, Sao Vicente, Cabo Verde Rita M. Rufino Valente
91(16)
China Meets South Africa in the Theatre
Some recent South African work about China & in China & the Year of China in South Africa, 2015 Ying Cheng
107(19)
A Checklist of African Playscripts Translated into Chinese
126(9)
Shang Wang
3 Indian Theatre Exchanges with East & South Africa: Historical dimensions
135(36)
Indians of African Descent Sidis, Bava Gor & spiritual practices Beheroze F. Shroff
137(15)
Jay Pather, South African Artist of Indian Ancestry
Transforming society in post-apartheid South Africa through his theatre-dance works
152(19)
Ketu H. Katrak
4 Contested Spaces
171(60)
Asian & African Theatre in Mauritius A report from the front line
173(8)
Michael Walling
Hidden under a Black Veil in Terra Incognita Representations of Africa in Bangladesh theatre with a checklist of African play scripts performed in Bangladesh
181(18)
Syed Jamil Ahmed
Book Reviews
199(1)
Jumai Ewu on
Wole Soyinka, ALAPATA APATA: A play for Yorubafonia, class for xenophiles
199(4)
Colin Chambers on
Bernth Lindfors, Ira Aldridge: The Last Years, 1855-1867
203(3)
James Gibbs on
Paul Schauert, Staging Ghana: Artistry & nationalism in state dance ensembles
206(6)
Ralph Yarrow on
Maeline Le Lay, `La parole construit le pays': Theatre, langues et didactisme au Katanga (Republique Democratique du Congo)
212(4)
Akin Adesokan on
Benita Brown, Dannabang Kuwabong & Christopher Olsen, Myth Performance in the African Diasporas: Ritual, theater, and dance
216(3)
Olu Obafemi on
S. A. Kafewo, T.J. Iorapuu & E. S. Dandaura (eds), Theatre Unbound: Refections on Theatre for Development and Social Change -- A festschrift in honour of Oga Steve Ahah
219(5)
Sola Adeyemi on
Hakeem. Bello, The Interpreters: Ritual, Violence and Social Regeneration in the Writing of Wole Soyinka
224(3)
Sola Adeyemi on
Five plays: Ekpe Inyang, The Swamps; Augustine Brempong, The King's Wages; Denja Abdullahi, Death and the King's Grey Hair and Other Plays
227(4)
Books received and noted 231
Femi Osofisan is an internationally lauded playwright, scholar, poet, novelist, actor, director, songwriter, and activist and Professor Emeritus of Theatre Arts at the University of Ibadan. Osofisan was awarded the Thalia Prize in 2016. He has published five novellas, six volumes of poetry, and more than 50 plays. CHRISTINE MATZKE, Lecturer in African Literatures and Cultures, Humboldt-University, Berlin. Femi Osofisan is an internationally lauded playwright, scholar, poet, novelist, actor, director, songwriter, and activist and Professor Emeritus of Theatre Arts at the University of Ibadan. Osofisan was awarded the Thalia Prize in 2016. He has published five novellas, six volumes of poetry, and more than 50 plays.