Race, Gender and Disability in Puppetry and Material Performance investigates and expands the multifaceted how and what of puppetry and material performance.
Race, Gender, and Disability in Puppetry and Material Performance investigates and expands the multifaceted how and what of puppetry and material performance.
This engaging collection explores how puppetry and material performance challenge and transform representations of race, gender, and disability through the powerful medium of object and effigy forms. The book also examines gender roles within puppetry and how puppetry addresses societal anxieties about the other and bodies traditionally excluded from normative spaces. Part 1: Reframing Puppetry Through Race, Gender, and Disability establishes a theoretical foundation for understanding puppetry as a site of intervention—whether in political protests, theatrical productions, or educational contexts. Part 2: Negotiating Identities builds on this foundation by examining how puppetry operates as a tool for reshaping identities and expanding representation. Part 3: Performances of the Other emphasizes how puppetry challenges established norms of embodiment and inclusion, offering possibilities for cultural reclamation and the redefinition of marginalized identities. Featuring nineteen chapters by leading experts, this collection illustrates how puppetry can challenge conventions, articulate nuanced identities, and illuminate complexities of race, gender, and disability.
Race, Gender, and Disability in Puppetry and Material Performance
is ideal for students of theatre and performance studies, theatre artists, scholars, and anyone seeking a deeper understanding of puppetry and material performance.
Foreword
Introduction
Part 1: Reframing Puppetry Through Race, Gender, and Disability
1. Puppets on Plinths: Disrupting Gender and Hegemonic Narratives with
General Baquedano's Monument During the 2019 Chilean Uprising
2. A Real American Wife, a Japanese Object: Critical Puppetry and the
Construction of the Orient in Minghellas Madam Butterfly
3. Performing Emergenc(e)y: Puppetry, Gender, Race, and Madness in Plot 99
4. Global Perspectives to Elevate Diversity in Puppetry
5. The Galilee Deaf Theatre Project
Part 2: Negotiating Identities
6. Dont It Make My Brown Eyes Blue: Kids on the Block and the
Intersectionality of Oppressions
7. Black Bodies in White Spaces: Reflections on Men/toring in Puppetry
8. Crip Ventriloquism as a Means of Coping with a Hidden Disability
9. Beyond Representation: A Conversation with Jummy Faruq on Decentering
Puppetry Practice and Design
10. Pancha la Parda: A New Myth for an Ancient Tradition
11. Colored Feels of Felt
12. The Other Karagöz: The Kurdish Qeregoz
13. Resisting Objects: « Refugee » Visibility in Theatre
Part 3: Performances of the Other
14. What Happened to the Room of Forgotten Voices: Challenging the Flawed
Vision of Human and Puppet Movement from the Past That Left Out Disabled
People
15. When Goiters Are Your Family Jewels: Maladies and the Grotesque in
Regional Heroic Glove Puppet Characters of Northern Italy
16. Intervening with Institutional Patriarchy: Woman Karagöz Puppeteers in
Turkey
17. Puppetry, Race, and Identity in The Bluest Eye
18. Remote Representation: A Puppetry Sensitization Project in Nairobi
19. Making Seen/Sounding Difference: Performing Black at a Majority White
Institution
Paulette Richards is an independent researcher and co-curator of the Living Objects: African American Puppetry exhibit at the University of Connecticuts Ballard Institute and Museum with Dr. John Bell.
Hazel Briar is an independent scholar with a PhD in theatre historiography from the University of Minnesota, USA. Her research examines performances of the dead, considering practices involving spiritualism and matter.
Alissa Mello is an award-winning editor, scholar, theatre artist, and Marie Sklodowska-Curie individual fellow (20222025) at the University of Exeter, UK. Their interests include women and performance, gender, identity, and practice.
Laura Purcell-Gates is a reader in theatre and performance at Bath Spa University in the UK and co-artistic director of Wattle and Daub, through which she conducts practice-based research on puppetry and non-normative bodies.