Social Justice in Spanish Golden Age Theatre
Herausgeber: Cowling, Erin; Nieto-Cuebas, Glenda Y; Garcia Jordán, Mina; De Miguel Magro, Tania
Social Justice in Spanish Golden Age Theatre
Herausgeber: Cowling, Erin; Nieto-Cuebas, Glenda Y; Garcia Jordán, Mina; De Miguel Magro, Tania
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This book explores early modern Spanish plays through the lens of social justice, extending its analysis to contemporary adaptations and how they can be used as a tool for achieving social justice today.
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This book explores early modern Spanish plays through the lens of social justice, extending its analysis to contemporary adaptations and how they can be used as a tool for achieving social justice today.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 294
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9781487507657
- ISBN-10: 1487507658
- Artikelnr.: 59080862
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 294
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9781487507657
- ISBN-10: 1487507658
- Artikelnr.: 59080862
Edited by Erin Alice Cowling, Tania de Miguel Magro, Mina García, and Glenda Y. Nieto-Cuebas
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Fernando Villa Proal, EFE TRES Teatro
Introduction
Part I: Readings of Comedias
1. The Poetics of Tragedy and Justice in Vélez de Guevara’s La serrana de
la Vera
Harrison Meadows, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
2. Utopian Divorce: El descasamentero by Salas Barbadillo
Tania de Miguel Magro, West Virginia University
3. The Voice of the Voiceless: Toward Equality and Social Justice in Sor
Juana’s El mártir del sacramento and El divino Narciso
Francisco López-Martín, Denison University
4. Staging Strikes, Depicting Merchants, and the Morisco Problem in
Valencia
Melissa Figueroa, Ohio University
5. Notes on an Ethics of Theatricality in Cervantes: El gallardo español
and La Numancia
Moisés Castillo, University of Kentucky
6. Using Shame and Guilt to Impose Social Injustice in Ana Caro’s El Conde
Partinuplés
Jaclyn Cohen-Steinberg, University of Southern California
Part II: Adaptations
7. A Social Justice Framing of the Comedia: EFE TRES Teatro’s El príncipe
ynocente Adaptation
Erin Alice Cowling, MacEwan University
8. Systemic Oppression in Morfeo Teatro’s Adaptation and Production of El
coloquio de los perros
Glenda Y. Nieto-Cuebas, Ohio Wesleyan University
9. El Trato de Argel and the Immigrant Crisis
Mina Garcia, Elon University
10. Chirinos and Chanfalla Go to America: Social Justice in Adaptations of
El retablo de las maravillas
Charles Patterson, Western Washington University
11. Social Networks, Social Justice, and the People’s Right to the Golden
Age Canon: The SGAE or the comedia Villain of the Digital Age?
Elena García Martín, North Central College
Part III: Interviews
Ben Gunter, Dramaturg and Director, Theater with a Mission, Mission San
Luis, Tallahassee, Florida
Harley Erdman, Professor, Dramaturg, Adaptor, and Translator of Early
Modern Theater and Gina Kaufmann, Associate Professor, Director, University
of Massachusetts, Amherst
Sandra Arpa and Paula Rodríguez, Founders, Actresses, and Directors, Teatro
Inverso, Spain
Fernando Villa Proal and Allan Flores, Founders and Directors, EFE TRES
Teatro, Mexico City
Ian Borden, Associate Professor of Theater Studies, Johnny Carson School of
Theater and Film, University of Nebraska
Natalia Menéndez, Former Director, Almagro International Classical Theater
Festival, Spain
Foreword
Fernando Villa Proal, EFE TRES Teatro
Introduction
Part I: Readings of Comedias
1. The Poetics of Tragedy and Justice in Vélez de Guevara’s La serrana de
la Vera
Harrison Meadows, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
2. Utopian Divorce: El descasamentero by Salas Barbadillo
Tania de Miguel Magro, West Virginia University
3. The Voice of the Voiceless: Toward Equality and Social Justice in Sor
Juana’s El mártir del sacramento and El divino Narciso
Francisco López-Martín, Denison University
4. Staging Strikes, Depicting Merchants, and the Morisco Problem in
Valencia
Melissa Figueroa, Ohio University
5. Notes on an Ethics of Theatricality in Cervantes: El gallardo español
and La Numancia
Moisés Castillo, University of Kentucky
6. Using Shame and Guilt to Impose Social Injustice in Ana Caro’s El Conde
Partinuplés
Jaclyn Cohen-Steinberg, University of Southern California
Part II: Adaptations
7. A Social Justice Framing of the Comedia: EFE TRES Teatro’s El príncipe
ynocente Adaptation
Erin Alice Cowling, MacEwan University
8. Systemic Oppression in Morfeo Teatro’s Adaptation and Production of El
coloquio de los perros
Glenda Y. Nieto-Cuebas, Ohio Wesleyan University
9. El Trato de Argel and the Immigrant Crisis
Mina Garcia, Elon University
10. Chirinos and Chanfalla Go to America: Social Justice in Adaptations of
El retablo de las maravillas
Charles Patterson, Western Washington University
11. Social Networks, Social Justice, and the People’s Right to the Golden
Age Canon: The SGAE or the comedia Villain of the Digital Age?
Elena García Martín, North Central College
Part III: Interviews
Ben Gunter, Dramaturg and Director, Theater with a Mission, Mission San
Luis, Tallahassee, Florida
Harley Erdman, Professor, Dramaturg, Adaptor, and Translator of Early
Modern Theater and Gina Kaufmann, Associate Professor, Director, University
of Massachusetts, Amherst
Sandra Arpa and Paula Rodríguez, Founders, Actresses, and Directors, Teatro
Inverso, Spain
Fernando Villa Proal and Allan Flores, Founders and Directors, EFE TRES
Teatro, Mexico City
Ian Borden, Associate Professor of Theater Studies, Johnny Carson School of
Theater and Film, University of Nebraska
Natalia Menéndez, Former Director, Almagro International Classical Theater
Festival, Spain
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Fernando Villa Proal, EFE TRES Teatro
Introduction
Part I: Readings of Comedias
1. The Poetics of Tragedy and Justice in Vélez de Guevara’s La serrana de
la Vera
Harrison Meadows, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
2. Utopian Divorce: El descasamentero by Salas Barbadillo
Tania de Miguel Magro, West Virginia University
3. The Voice of the Voiceless: Toward Equality and Social Justice in Sor
Juana’s El mártir del sacramento and El divino Narciso
Francisco López-Martín, Denison University
4. Staging Strikes, Depicting Merchants, and the Morisco Problem in
Valencia
Melissa Figueroa, Ohio University
5. Notes on an Ethics of Theatricality in Cervantes: El gallardo español
and La Numancia
Moisés Castillo, University of Kentucky
6. Using Shame and Guilt to Impose Social Injustice in Ana Caro’s El Conde
Partinuplés
Jaclyn Cohen-Steinberg, University of Southern California
Part II: Adaptations
7. A Social Justice Framing of the Comedia: EFE TRES Teatro’s El príncipe
ynocente Adaptation
Erin Alice Cowling, MacEwan University
8. Systemic Oppression in Morfeo Teatro’s Adaptation and Production of El
coloquio de los perros
Glenda Y. Nieto-Cuebas, Ohio Wesleyan University
9. El Trato de Argel and the Immigrant Crisis
Mina Garcia, Elon University
10. Chirinos and Chanfalla Go to America: Social Justice in Adaptations of
El retablo de las maravillas
Charles Patterson, Western Washington University
11. Social Networks, Social Justice, and the People’s Right to the Golden
Age Canon: The SGAE or the comedia Villain of the Digital Age?
Elena García Martín, North Central College
Part III: Interviews
Ben Gunter, Dramaturg and Director, Theater with a Mission, Mission San
Luis, Tallahassee, Florida
Harley Erdman, Professor, Dramaturg, Adaptor, and Translator of Early
Modern Theater and Gina Kaufmann, Associate Professor, Director, University
of Massachusetts, Amherst
Sandra Arpa and Paula Rodríguez, Founders, Actresses, and Directors, Teatro
Inverso, Spain
Fernando Villa Proal and Allan Flores, Founders and Directors, EFE TRES
Teatro, Mexico City
Ian Borden, Associate Professor of Theater Studies, Johnny Carson School of
Theater and Film, University of Nebraska
Natalia Menéndez, Former Director, Almagro International Classical Theater
Festival, Spain
Foreword
Fernando Villa Proal, EFE TRES Teatro
Introduction
Part I: Readings of Comedias
1. The Poetics of Tragedy and Justice in Vélez de Guevara’s La serrana de
la Vera
Harrison Meadows, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
2. Utopian Divorce: El descasamentero by Salas Barbadillo
Tania de Miguel Magro, West Virginia University
3. The Voice of the Voiceless: Toward Equality and Social Justice in Sor
Juana’s El mártir del sacramento and El divino Narciso
Francisco López-Martín, Denison University
4. Staging Strikes, Depicting Merchants, and the Morisco Problem in
Valencia
Melissa Figueroa, Ohio University
5. Notes on an Ethics of Theatricality in Cervantes: El gallardo español
and La Numancia
Moisés Castillo, University of Kentucky
6. Using Shame and Guilt to Impose Social Injustice in Ana Caro’s El Conde
Partinuplés
Jaclyn Cohen-Steinberg, University of Southern California
Part II: Adaptations
7. A Social Justice Framing of the Comedia: EFE TRES Teatro’s El príncipe
ynocente Adaptation
Erin Alice Cowling, MacEwan University
8. Systemic Oppression in Morfeo Teatro’s Adaptation and Production of El
coloquio de los perros
Glenda Y. Nieto-Cuebas, Ohio Wesleyan University
9. El Trato de Argel and the Immigrant Crisis
Mina Garcia, Elon University
10. Chirinos and Chanfalla Go to America: Social Justice in Adaptations of
El retablo de las maravillas
Charles Patterson, Western Washington University
11. Social Networks, Social Justice, and the People’s Right to the Golden
Age Canon: The SGAE or the comedia Villain of the Digital Age?
Elena García Martín, North Central College
Part III: Interviews
Ben Gunter, Dramaturg and Director, Theater with a Mission, Mission San
Luis, Tallahassee, Florida
Harley Erdman, Professor, Dramaturg, Adaptor, and Translator of Early
Modern Theater and Gina Kaufmann, Associate Professor, Director, University
of Massachusetts, Amherst
Sandra Arpa and Paula Rodríguez, Founders, Actresses, and Directors, Teatro
Inverso, Spain
Fernando Villa Proal and Allan Flores, Founders and Directors, EFE TRES
Teatro, Mexico City
Ian Borden, Associate Professor of Theater Studies, Johnny Carson School of
Theater and Film, University of Nebraska
Natalia Menéndez, Former Director, Almagro International Classical Theater
Festival, Spain