Theatre blogging : the emergence of a critical culture / Megan Vaughan.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781350068810
- Theater blogging
- 808.2/
- PN1707 V38 2019
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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SPAA Library General Collection | On Shelves | PN1707 V38 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0001778 |
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PN1707 K53 2016 How to read a play : script analysis for directors / | PN1707 .K59 2017 Script analysis for theatre : tools for interpretation, collaboration and production / | PN1707 .R33 2016 Theatre criticism : changing landscapes / | PN1707 V38 2019 Theatre blogging : the emergence of a critical culture / | PN1721.O9 B76 2001 The Oxford illustrated history of theatre / | PN1811 .H58 2016 مسرح ما بعد الحداثة : كباريه شكيب خوري وهاملت ماشين هاينر مولر نموذجان / | PN1861 .W67 2015 The world encyclopedia of contemporary theatre. Vol. 4, The Arab World / |
P.B
Includes bibliographical references and index.
History and practice. Introduction -- Theatre blogging since 2003: a history -- Theatre blogging in practice: a WhatsApp dialogue -- Theatre blogging under threat -- Selected posts. A note on the texts -- Theatremaking and authorship -- Anger and dissent -- Reviews and reviewing -- Representation and visilibity -- On My name Is Rachel Corrie -- On Three kingdoms.
"Megan Vaughan contextualises the key debates and writings of more than forty bloggers with current research, and brings past and present practitioners into conversation with one another. The work of prominent and influential early adopters such as Encore Theatre Magazine and Chris Goode in London; George Hunka and Isaac Butler in New York; Jill Dolan at Princeton University and Alison Croggon in Melbourne is featured and considered alongside those who followed them. Vaughan presents arguments that have impacted on both arts journalism and the theatre industry. The book also includes: activist bloggers writing about fringe working conditions and diverse casting,explorations of new dramaturgical practices that have been developed and piloted by bloggers,a rigorous assessment of the institutional changes - in theatre, in academia, and for newspapers - which have been attributed to bloggers since their emergence. Vaughan concludes by posing two key questions: to what extent have theatre bloggers established a new critical culture? Has the potential of the form been realised?"--
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