Performing Women: Female Characters, Male Playwrights, and the Modern Stage

Performing Women: Female Characters, Male Playwrights, and the Modern Stage

by Gay Gibson Cima
Performing Women: Female Characters, Male Playwrights, and the Modern Stage

Performing Women: Female Characters, Male Playwrights, and the Modern Stage

by Gay Gibson Cima

Paperback(New Edition)

$39.95 
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Overview

Some feminists criticize male playwrights for misrepresenting and thereby victimizing women through patriarchal narratives; other feminists applaud selected male playwrights as creators of "universal" women's roles. In this bold and imaginative book, Gay Gibson Cima delineates previously unacknowledged complexities in the relationship between male playwrights and female characters in the modern theatre. That relationship has been misinterpreted, she maintains, because the contributions of female actors and the variations in their actual performance conditions and styles are too often ignored.

Taking into account hypothetical as well as historical performances of works by representative male playwrights from Ibsen to Beckett, Cima sheds important new light on the acting styles invented by women to create female characters on stage. Changes in performance style, Cima observes, may alter conventional modes of viewing and disrupt behavioral codes generated by a patriarchal cultural system.

Performing Women is essential reading for theatre critics and historians, feminist theorists, theatre professionals and amateurs, and others interested in film and the stage.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801483370
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 06/27/1996
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Gay Gibson Cima is a professor of English and the former director of the Human Rights Initiative at Georgetown University.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionOne: Ibsen and the Critical Actor
Two: Strindberg and the Transformational Actor
Three: The Brecht Collective and the Parabolic Actor
Four: Pinter and the Cinematic Actor
Five: Shepard and the Improvisational Actor
Six: Beckett and the No ActorAfterwordIndex

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