Featuring contributions from international scholars, the first volume of Theatre, Performance and the Fantastic interrogates the theatrical presentation of fantastic imagery – from gothic horror and science fiction to magic, myth and more – as a key dramatic tool for addressing complex sociopolitical issues.Offering a ground-breaking examination of a rich yet under-examined field by rooting itself in the affective and embodied qualities of the discipline, Theatre, Performance and the Fantastic interrogates the fantastic as both a dramatic tool and as a sociocultural phenomenon. The first volume – Stages and Scripts – focuses on an array of playwrights including Alistair McDowall, Rabindranath Tagore, Edward Bond, Katori Hall, Joël Pommerat and Migdalia Cruz, while considering how their work is interpreted through specific performance strategies such as casting, direction and design. From science fiction, fantasy and gothic horror to superheroes, folklore and fairy tales, fantastic narratives proliferate throughout print and screen media, enjoying popular acclaim and academic interest. Intruding upon and departing from normative depictions of reality, these fictions challenge dominant socio-political orthodoxy by proposing alternative forms of agency and subjectivity. Yet while scholarship dedicated to the literary, cinematic and televisual fantastic continues to accumulate, its presence within contemporary theatre and performance remains largely unexplored.Featuring contributions from an array of scholars who locate and interpret the fantastic within a variety of regional, political and cultural contexts, Theatre, Performance and the Fantastic, Volume 1: Stages and Scripts promises a fresh, thought-provoking and rewarding engagement with a subject long overdue critical attention.
Ian Farnell is Teaching Fellow in Theatre and Performance Studies at the University of Warwick, UK.
List of IllustrationsAcknowledgementsIntroduction: Performing the Fantastic, Ian Farnell (University of Warwick, UK)Chapter 1: Strange Temporalities, Everyday Violence: The Continuum of Gender-Based Violence in Alistair McDowall’s all of it and The Glow, Alex Watson (BIMM Institute, Brighton, UK)Chapter 2: What is Gender? What is Theatre? Fantastic Uncertainty in Joël Pommerat’s Contes et légendes, Aloysia Rousseau (Sorbonne University, France)Chapter 3: Reinvigorating Reality through Materiality and Theatricality: A Rethinking of Science Fiction through Li Jianjun’s World on a Wire, Jasmine [Yueming] Li (University of California, USA) Chapter 4: 'History Done and Undone': Time Travel, Magic and the Fantastic in African American Playwriting, Ben Poore (University of York, UK)Chapter 5: Resisting Exoticization through the Fantastic: The Subversive Figure of the WomAnimal in Migdalia Cruz’s Fur, Magda Barouta (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece)Chapter 6: Embracing the 'Other': Edward Bond’s Plays for Young People, Kate Katafiasz (Newman University, UK)Chapter 7: Philip Quesne’s Cosmic Drama: Fantasies of Possible Futures, Stefania Lodi Rizzini (independent scholar)Chapter 8: Fantastic Ageing, Siân Adiseshiah (Loughborough University, UK)Chapter 9: Forging Identity through Travel into the Fantastic Lands: A Critical Reading of Rabindranath Tagore’s The Land of Cards, Madhumita Roy (Adamas University, India)Chapter 10: Ghosts of Ghosts: Spectral Presence and Presents in The Spirits Play, Ryan-Ashleigh Boey (National University of Singapore, Singapore)Index