Performance and Real Relationships

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A01=Ildiko Rippel
authenticity
Author_Ildiko Rippel
Category=ATC
Category=ATD
Category=ATDC
Category=ATDF
Category=ATN
Category=FXD
Category=JHBK
children
Derrida
domesticity
empathy
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family
fathers
forthcoming
gender
Kristeva
Lacan
motherhood
mothers
parents
psychoanalytical theory
relationships
siblings

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350448094
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book argues that staging real relationships and collaborating with family members has the potential to rupture theatrical representation by producing an effect of authenticity.

Drawing on psychoanalytic theory (Lacan, Kristeva), poststructuralist critique (Derrida), and feminist and queer theory, the author explores how theatre becomes a method of doing family: a set of embodied, affective and performative practices rather than a fixed institution.

The book is richly informed by case studies, supported by production photographs, including the German company She She Pop performing Testament (2010) with their fathers; Liz Clarke performing I Tattooed My Baby (2013) with her infant daughter; Zoo Indigo’s Under the Covers (2009) and Blueprint (2012), performed with their children and mothers; Bryony Kimmings performing with her partner in Fake it Till you Make it (2015); and First Trimester (2023) by Queer performance maker Krishna Istha performing alongside their partner and extended ‘chosen family’.

The chapters include interwoven interviews with theatre practitioners, discussing their experience of performing with family members, and offering fascinating insights into the processes, ethics and methodologies of doing so. The exploration of love and family are enriched by the author’s own autobiographical reflections, written in a poetic mode of auto theory.
Ultimately, the book reveals how real relationships on stage can generate empathy, challenge normative kinship structures, and invite audiences to rethink care, love, and the many ways we do family.

Ildikó Rippel is Senior Lecturer and Course Leader for the BA Theatre, Acting and Performance programme at the University of Worcester, UK. Her performance research examines familial theatre and dramaturgies of migration. She has co-authored articles on maternal performance in Performance Research (2017) and on dramaturgies of migration in Critical Stages (2020, 2022). She is Co-Artistic Director of Zoo Indigo, an experimental theatre company whose practice blends autobiographical material, maternal and familial performance and a playful interrogation of cultural identity.

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