Rethinking Folk Drama

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A01=Steve Tillis
Author_Steve Tillis
Category=AFT
Category=ATD
Category=JBCC
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Popular Culture: Music and Performing Arts

Product details

  • ISBN 9780313307539
  • Publication Date: 28 Feb 1999
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Traditions of folk drama exist throughout the world, ranging from simple forms that involve few people, rudimentary texts, and crude performance practices, to complex forms involving entire towns, highly elaborated texts, and performance practices that have developed over hundreds of years. Yet folk drama lacks, to this day, a full-length study from the perspectives of either folkloristics or drama studies. This work seeks to fill that lack by undertaking a bi-disciplinary study of the idea of folk drama, drawing on examples from around the world, including Yangge (China), Ta'ziyeh (Iran), Bhav=a=i (India), Karagöz (Turkey), Apidán (Nigeria), and the Mummers' Play (England). It examines the meanings of folk and drama, the significance of ritual and performance in folk drama, the frequently encountered problem of Eurocentric bias, the conventional tripartite division of drama into elite, popular, and folk categories, the need for a methodology capable of describing all aspects of folk drama performance, and the taxonomic place of folk drama in both folkloristics and drama studies. On the basis of this examination, Rethinking Folk Drama establishes a new basis for understanding the ubiquity and variety of folk drama.

Steve Tillis has a Doctorate in Dramatic Art from the University of California, Berkeley and is now teaching at Stanford University. He has recently written Toward an Aesthetics of the Puppet: Puppetry as a Theatrical Art (Greenwood, 1992).

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