Performance, Trauma and Puerto Rico in Musical Theatre

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A01=Colleen Rua
American Musical Theatre
Author_Colleen Rua
bilingual theatre research
Category=AFKP
Category=ATDF
Category=ATQ
Category=AVLM
Category=CBW
Category=DSBH5
Category=NHTQ
Criminal Stereotype
disaster response art
El Barrio
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Hamilton Tour
Hispanic Federation
King George III
latin
Latinx Community
Latinx Identity
Latinx performance studies
LUMA
Mango Tree
Museo De Arte
Museo De Arte De
musical
musical theatre trauma healing Puerto Rico
performance
postcolonial cultural studies
Puerto Rican
Puerto Rican Characters
Puerto Rican Diaspora
Puerto Rican Flag
Puerto Rican Identity
ritual in performing arts
Spanish Lyrics
Spray Paint Cans
States Secretary
theatre
Trash Talk
trauma healing arts
Trump Administration's Withdrawal
Trump Administration’s Withdrawal
Washington Heights
West Side Story
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032251950
  • Weight: 320g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This study positions four musicals and their associated artists as mobilizers of defiant joy in relation to trauma and healing in Puerto Rico.

This book argues that the historical trajectory of these musicals has formed a canon of works that have reiterated, resisted or transformed experiences of trauma through linguistic, ritual, and geographic interventions. These traumas may be disaster-related, migrant-related, colonial or patriarchal. Bilingualism and translation, ritual action, and geographic space engage moments of trauma (natural disaster, incarceration, death) and healing (community celebration, grieving, emancipation) in these works. The musicals considered are West Side Story (1957, 2009, 2019), The Capeman (1998), In the Heights (2008), and Hamilton (2015). Central to this argument is that each of the musicals discussed is tied to Puerto Rico, either through the representation of Puerto Rican characters and stories, or through the Puerto Rican positionality of its creators. The author moves beyond the musicals to consider Lin-Manuel Miranda as an embodied site of healing, that has been met with controversy, as well as post-Hurricane Maria relief efforts led by Miranda on the island and from a distance. In each of the works discussed, acts of belonging shape notions of survivorship and witness.

This book also opens a dialogue between these musicals and the work of island-based artists Y no había luz, that has served as sites of first response to disaster. This book will be of interest to students and scholars in Latinx Theatre, Musical Theatre and Translation studies.

Colleen Rua is Assistant Professor of Theatre Studies in the School of Theatre and Dance at the University of Florida, USA.

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