Women Centre Stage

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A01=Poile Sengupta
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Author_Poile Sengupta
Blind Man
Blood Flowers
Brah Min
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Category=JBSF
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Committed Women Actors
contemporary South Asian plays
Deaf Man
Downstage Left
Enters Stage
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Exits Stage
feminist theatre studies
Frying Pan
gender roles in modern Indian drama
gendered power dynamics
Gentleman's Gentleman
Gold Cart
Hell Cat
Home Town
Human Dice
Indian drama
Indian sociopolitical drama
intersectional identity politics
Large Family
Mid Day
Mother's Daughter
multilingual performance analysis
Multilingualism
NARI
Political systems
Poor Sister
Sexual abuse
Stage Left
Sweet Idea
Trunk Call
Upstage Left
Women's empowerment
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415563147
  • Weight: 670g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Jan 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This selection of six contemporary plays explores a wide range of issues — familial, social, mythological, political — with women centre stage. The plays are distinct from each other in structure, theme and style, but are bound together by a common thread — the position and role of women in family, social and political systems. Issues such as sexual abuse, in-law relationships, the trauma of ageing, the struggle for women’s empowerment, love and passion, desire and revenge, and dynastic politics are discussed through the varying perspectives of a number of characters, bringing an immediacy and urgency to the subjects under consideration.

What is significant about the plays is that they highlight the manipulation of the English language resulting with the introduction of an ‘Indian’ syntax. Multilingualism is used to offset the so-called ‘westernisation’ that has been the by-product of the systematic globalisation of ‘third world’ countries. While the plays are meant to be staged, they are also very reader-friendly and will be entertaining as well as educative for the general reader.

Poile Sengupta is a playwright and a writer for children. She has been lecturer at the University of Delhi, India and a columnist for a magazine and two national newspapers.

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