Performing Women

Performing Women
Title Performing Women PDF eBook
Author Gay Gibson Cima
Publisher Cornell University Press
Total Pages 252
Release 1993
Genre Drama
ISBN 9780801483370

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Argues that critics have misunderstood the relationship between male playwrights and women's roles because they have neglected the interpretive skills of the actresses playing those roles. Analyzes hypothetical as well as historical performances to demonstrate how women have invented acting styles to portray women created by playwrights from Ibsen to Beckett. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Performing Women

Performing Women
Title Performing Women PDF eBook
Author Alison Oddey
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 310
Release 2016-07-27
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 1349277207

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Alison Oddey's interviews with prominent performing women span generations, cultures, perspectives, practice and the best part of the twentieth century, telling various stories collectively. Stand-ups, 'classic' actresses, film and television personalities, experimental and 'alternative' practitioners discuss why they want to perform, what motivates them, and how their personal history has contributed to their desires to perform. Oddey's critical introductory and concluding chapters analyse both historical and cultural contexts and explore themes arising from interviews. These include sense of identity, acting as playing (recapturing and revisiting childhood), displacement of roots, performing, motherhood and 'being', performing comedy, differences between theatre, film and television performance, attitudes towards and relationships with audiences, and working with directors. The prominent subtext of motherhood reveals a consciousness of split subjectivities with and beyond performance.

PERFORMING WOMEN

PERFORMING WOMEN
Title PERFORMING WOMEN PDF eBook
Author Susannah Crowder
Publisher
Total Pages
Release 2018
Genre
ISBN 9781526127242

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The Collective Wisdom of High-Performing Women

The Collective Wisdom of High-Performing Women
Title The Collective Wisdom of High-Performing Women PDF eBook
Author Colleen Moorehead
Publisher Barlow Publishing
Total Pages 0
Release 2019-04-23
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 9781988025384

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Examines the 10 key characteristics of today's winning leaders. Includes the voices of experience, some 70 women who have participated in the Judy Project, a leadership program run by the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto that has trained 400 women for future leadership positions. These women tell compelling, first-person stories about ambition, courage, and the hard choices they've made to manage their personal and professional lives in the real world of business.--Book jacket.

Performing Women

Performing Women
Title Performing Women PDF eBook
Author Alison Oddey
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 365
Release 2016-04-30
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1349729930

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Alison Oddey's interviews with prominent performing women span generations, cultures, perspectives, practice and the best part of the twentieth-century, telling various stories collectively. Stand-ups, 'classic' actresses, film and television personalities, experimental and 'alternative' practitioners discuss why they want to perform, what motivates them, and how their personal history has contributed to their desire to perform. Oddey's critical introductory and concluding chapters analyze both historical and cultural contexts and explore themes arising from the interviews. These include sense of identity, acting as playing (recapturing and revisiting childhood), displacement of roots, performing, motherhood and 'being', performing comedy, differences between theatre, film and television performance, attitudes towards and relationships with audiences, and working with directors. The prominent subtext of motherhood reveals a consciousness of split subjectives with and beyond performance. This new edition of the book includes three new interviews with actresses, and is useful primary resource material for undergraduate students on performance studies courses.

Performing women

Performing women
Title Performing women PDF eBook
Author Susannah Crowder
Publisher Manchester University Press
Total Pages 262
Release 2018-08-31
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1526106418

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This book takes on a key problem in the history of drama: the ‘exceptional’ staging of the life of Catherine of Siena by a female actor and a female patron in 1468 Metz. Exploring the lives and performances of these previously anonymous women, the book brings the elusive figure of the female performer to centre stage. It integrates new approaches to drama, gender and patronage with a performance methodology to explore how the women of fifteenth-century Metz enacted varied kinds of performance that extended beyond the theatre. For example, decades before the 1468 play, Joan of Arc returned from the grave in the form of an impersonator named Claude. Offering a new paradigm of female performance that positions women at the core of public culture, Performing women is essential reading for scholars of pre-modern women and drama, and is also relevant to lecturers and students of late-medieval performance, religion and memory.

Performing Women and Modern Literary Culture in Latin America

Performing Women and Modern Literary Culture in Latin America
Title Performing Women and Modern Literary Culture in Latin America PDF eBook
Author Vicky Unruh
Publisher University of Texas Press
Total Pages 433
Release 2009-06-03
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0292773749

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Women have always been the muses who inspire the creativity of men, but how do women become the creators of art themselves? This was the challenge faced by Latin American women who aspired to write in the 1920s and 1930s. Though women's roles were opening up during this time, women writers were not automatically welcomed by the Latin American literary avant-gardes, whose male members viewed women's participation in tertulias (literary gatherings) and publications as uncommon and even forbidding. How did Latin American women writers, celebrated by male writers as the "New Eve" but distrusted as fellow creators, find their intellectual homes and fashion their artistic missions? In this innovative book, Vicky Unruh explores how women writers of the vanguard period often gained access to literary life as public performers. Using a novel, interdisciplinary synthesis of performance theory, she shows how Latin American women's work in theatre, poetry declamation, song, dance, oration, witty display, and bold journalistic self-portraiture helped them craft their public personas as writers and shaped their singular forms of analytical thought, cultural critique, and literary style. Concentrating on eleven writers from Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Mexico, Peru, and Venezuela, Unruh demonstrates that, as these women identified themselves as instigators of change rather than as passive muses, they unleashed penetrating critiques of projects for social and artistic modernization in Latin America.