Description

Book Synopsis
Examines twenty-first-century documentary theatre in Latin America, focusing on important plays by the Argentine director Vivi Tellas, the Argentine playwright and director Lola Arias, the Mexican theatre collective Teatro Linea de Sombra, and the Chilean playwright and director Guillermo Calderon.

Trade Review
“In Staging Lives in Latin American Theater Paola S. HernÁndez offers a remarkable account of the emergence of new documentary theater in Latin America. Through meticulous analysis of object-props, autobiographical performance, and reenactment practices, HernÁndez shows how archives come to life onstage and participate in reshaping notions of the self and the real. Staging Lives in Latin American Theater is an essential read for understanding how documentary theater contributes to redefining the archive and related concepts of truth-telling, testimony, and evidence in Latin America." —Brenda Werth, author of Theatre, Performance and Memory Politics in Argentina

"Staging Lives in Latin American Theater is a major contribution to the fields of Latin American theater and performance studies. HernÁndez offers a theoretically sophisticated and eminently readable analysis of how the theater of the ‘real’ comes to embody a broad range of aesthetic positions within the liminal space of fact and fiction. In each of the cases, the playwrights and performance artists mobilize the archive to flip accepted social norms and values around the concepts of truth and authenticity . . . HernÁndez’s theoretical range is remarkable." —Analola Santana, author of Freak Performances: Dissidence in Latin American Theater

"A welcome, timely, and significant contribution to Latin American theater and performance studies, Staging Lives in Latin American Theater offers meticulously researched case studies of recent projects from Argentina, Chile, and Mexico, whose practitioners variously ‘kidnap reality,’ consider actors ‘stunt doubles of their own lives,’ self-consciously ‘manipulate’ the onstage role of the real, and employ theater as ‘evidentiary forum’ within the larger public arena. In this accomplished study, Paola S. HernÁndez encourages readers to reconsider the broader relationship between the effective and the affective, ultimately and importantly prodding us to complicate, question, and expand our own notions of the myriad roles documents—and the ‘authentic’—play in documentary theater produced in this hemisphere and across the globe." —Jean Graham-Jones, editor of Lola Arias: Re-enacting Life and author of Evita, Inevitably: Performing Argentina's Female Icons Before and After Eva PerÓn

Staging Lives in Latin American Theater is a brilliant study of what it means to bring (auto)biographical stories to the stage in a way that navigates fact and fiction, creating affective bonds. Audiences experience personal stories in a way that allows a profound connection to and reassessment of the past. HernÁndez at once affirms and rewrites Latin American (theater) history, mirroring the outstanding performances she analyzes.” —Stuart A. Day, author of Outside Theater: Alliances That Shape Mexico

Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Note on Translation
  • Introduction: The Real on Stage: New Modes of Documentary Theater
  • 1. Vivi Tellas: Biodramas and the Act of Documenting Lives
  • 2. Reenactments: The Autobiographical at Play in Lola Arias
  • 3. Shadows of the Real: Teatro LÍnea de Sombra
  • 4. Memory Sites: Guillermo CalderÓn’s Excavation for the Truth
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Staging Lives in Latin American Theater Bodies

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    A Hardback by Paola Hernández

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      Publisher: Northwestern University Press
      Publication Date: 4/30/2021 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780810143371, 978-0810143371
      ISBN10: 0810143372
      Also in:
      Theatre studies

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Examines twenty-first-century documentary theatre in Latin America, focusing on important plays by the Argentine director Vivi Tellas, the Argentine playwright and director Lola Arias, the Mexican theatre collective Teatro Linea de Sombra, and the Chilean playwright and director Guillermo Calderon.

      Trade Review
      “In Staging Lives in Latin American Theater Paola S. HernÁndez offers a remarkable account of the emergence of new documentary theater in Latin America. Through meticulous analysis of object-props, autobiographical performance, and reenactment practices, HernÁndez shows how archives come to life onstage and participate in reshaping notions of the self and the real. Staging Lives in Latin American Theater is an essential read for understanding how documentary theater contributes to redefining the archive and related concepts of truth-telling, testimony, and evidence in Latin America." —Brenda Werth, author of Theatre, Performance and Memory Politics in Argentina

      "Staging Lives in Latin American Theater is a major contribution to the fields of Latin American theater and performance studies. HernÁndez offers a theoretically sophisticated and eminently readable analysis of how the theater of the ‘real’ comes to embody a broad range of aesthetic positions within the liminal space of fact and fiction. In each of the cases, the playwrights and performance artists mobilize the archive to flip accepted social norms and values around the concepts of truth and authenticity . . . HernÁndez’s theoretical range is remarkable." —Analola Santana, author of Freak Performances: Dissidence in Latin American Theater

      "A welcome, timely, and significant contribution to Latin American theater and performance studies, Staging Lives in Latin American Theater offers meticulously researched case studies of recent projects from Argentina, Chile, and Mexico, whose practitioners variously ‘kidnap reality,’ consider actors ‘stunt doubles of their own lives,’ self-consciously ‘manipulate’ the onstage role of the real, and employ theater as ‘evidentiary forum’ within the larger public arena. In this accomplished study, Paola S. HernÁndez encourages readers to reconsider the broader relationship between the effective and the affective, ultimately and importantly prodding us to complicate, question, and expand our own notions of the myriad roles documents—and the ‘authentic’—play in documentary theater produced in this hemisphere and across the globe." —Jean Graham-Jones, editor of Lola Arias: Re-enacting Life and author of Evita, Inevitably: Performing Argentina's Female Icons Before and After Eva PerÓn

      Staging Lives in Latin American Theater is a brilliant study of what it means to bring (auto)biographical stories to the stage in a way that navigates fact and fiction, creating affective bonds. Audiences experience personal stories in a way that allows a profound connection to and reassessment of the past. HernÁndez at once affirms and rewrites Latin American (theater) history, mirroring the outstanding performances she analyzes.” —Stuart A. Day, author of Outside Theater: Alliances That Shape Mexico

      Table of Contents
      • Acknowledgements
      • Note on Translation
      • Introduction: The Real on Stage: New Modes of Documentary Theater
      • 1. Vivi Tellas: Biodramas and the Act of Documenting Lives
      • 2. Reenactments: The Autobiographical at Play in Lola Arias
      • 3. Shadows of the Real: Teatro LÍnea de Sombra
      • 4. Memory Sites: Guillermo CalderÓn’s Excavation for the Truth
      • Conclusion
      • Notes
      • Bibliography
      • Index

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