Description

Book Synopsis
The first comprehensive overview of established and emergent approaches to undertaking theatre and performance research, this book demonstrates why and how mixed methods research is necessary for investigating and explaining performance and advancing new critical agendas in cultural study.

Trade Review
'This collection feels like a masterclass with the leading teachers of research methods in our field. It gathers contributions from an international group of distinguished scholars, assembling them in a dynamic organizational structure.' Shannon Jackson, University of California, Berkeley
'This field-defining volume is a sorely needed clarion call. Those of us working in theatre and performance studies too rarely consider “how research comes into being”. What we need is fresh energy and new direction concerning methodologies. These essays, theoretically abundant and transnational in scope, offer just that and will reinvigorate the field for years to come.' Douglas A. Jones, Duke University
'Sophisticated, pragmatic, and eminently readable, this Guide will be a core text in all methods and methodologies courses in theatre and performance studies, and will be required reading for anyone doing research in the field: archival, embodied, ethnographic, interdisciplinary, cross-cultural, practice-based, unconventional, or any mixture of the above.' Ric Knowles, University of Guelph
'A must-read for theatre and performance scholars and artists. Excellently curated with great attention to practical, theoretical, and pedagogical uses, this book provokes thinking through what we mean by “performance as method” in theatre and performance studies research. Researchers seeking ways to decolonize thinking, activate Indigenous approaches, and integrate methodologies of inclusion in their work will find gems of ideas in this collection.' Jazmin Llana, De La Salle University
'This is a terrific volume. Including a wide range of academic voices, the book invites researchers to experiment with methods and working processes that are sited, situated, and contextually located. It is critically astute, well balanced, and thought-provoking, and will inspire and inform scholars for years to come.' Helen Nicholson, Royal Holloway, University of London
'A smart, rigorously conceived, and eminently readable collection that reveals how thinking about methods takes us right to the heart of what and how we research in theatre and performance studies. I expect this book will inspire scholarship and guide teaching for years to come.' Heike Roms, University of Exeter

Table of Contents
List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction: mix and stir Tracy C. Davis; Part I. Planning: 1. Difference Brandi Wilkins Catanese, Nicola Mārie Hyland and Ben Spatz; 2. Planning a research project: early steps Maggie B. Gale; 3. Interdisciplinary acts: learning about theatre from the social sciences Michael McKinnie; 4. Mixing methods in a multi-sited, collaborative project: researching migration, working with variation Emine Fişek; 5. Ethics Natalie Alvarez and Patrick Anderson; Part II. Doing: 6. You're already a digital humanist: why aren't you thinking like one? Derek Miller; 7. Analyzing immersive performance through lived bricolage Julia M. Ritter; 8. Talking theatre in an oral culture: audience research in Ghana Awo Mana Asiedu; 9. Painful fieldwork? Radical empiricism and ritual performance in the Philippines Julius Bautista; 10. Fieldwork as method in theatre and performance studies Jonas Tinius; Part III. Interpreting: 11. Archives and embodiments Adrian Curtin, Prarthana Purkayastha and meLê yamomo; 12. Methods to research marginalized early-modern practices: Más Saber Baylar Anke Charton; 13. Taking your time: research in learning-disabled theatre Tony McCaffrey; 14. Not here for the disciplines: researching with and for the Pacific Katerina Teaiwa; 15. Complexity Ruthie Abeliovich, Leo Cabranes-Grant and Soo Ryon Yoon; Conclusion: the aesthetics of performance research: appearance, conduct, design Paul Rae; Index.

The Cambridge Guide to Mixed Methods Research for Theatre and Performance Studies

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      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 2/8/2024 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781009294881, 978-1009294881
      ISBN10: 1009294881

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The first comprehensive overview of established and emergent approaches to undertaking theatre and performance research, this book demonstrates why and how mixed methods research is necessary for investigating and explaining performance and advancing new critical agendas in cultural study.

      Trade Review
      'This collection feels like a masterclass with the leading teachers of research methods in our field. It gathers contributions from an international group of distinguished scholars, assembling them in a dynamic organizational structure.' Shannon Jackson, University of California, Berkeley
      'This field-defining volume is a sorely needed clarion call. Those of us working in theatre and performance studies too rarely consider “how research comes into being”. What we need is fresh energy and new direction concerning methodologies. These essays, theoretically abundant and transnational in scope, offer just that and will reinvigorate the field for years to come.' Douglas A. Jones, Duke University
      'Sophisticated, pragmatic, and eminently readable, this Guide will be a core text in all methods and methodologies courses in theatre and performance studies, and will be required reading for anyone doing research in the field: archival, embodied, ethnographic, interdisciplinary, cross-cultural, practice-based, unconventional, or any mixture of the above.' Ric Knowles, University of Guelph
      'A must-read for theatre and performance scholars and artists. Excellently curated with great attention to practical, theoretical, and pedagogical uses, this book provokes thinking through what we mean by “performance as method” in theatre and performance studies research. Researchers seeking ways to decolonize thinking, activate Indigenous approaches, and integrate methodologies of inclusion in their work will find gems of ideas in this collection.' Jazmin Llana, De La Salle University
      'This is a terrific volume. Including a wide range of academic voices, the book invites researchers to experiment with methods and working processes that are sited, situated, and contextually located. It is critically astute, well balanced, and thought-provoking, and will inspire and inform scholars for years to come.' Helen Nicholson, Royal Holloway, University of London
      'A smart, rigorously conceived, and eminently readable collection that reveals how thinking about methods takes us right to the heart of what and how we research in theatre and performance studies. I expect this book will inspire scholarship and guide teaching for years to come.' Heike Roms, University of Exeter

      Table of Contents
      List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction: mix and stir Tracy C. Davis; Part I. Planning: 1. Difference Brandi Wilkins Catanese, Nicola Mārie Hyland and Ben Spatz; 2. Planning a research project: early steps Maggie B. Gale; 3. Interdisciplinary acts: learning about theatre from the social sciences Michael McKinnie; 4. Mixing methods in a multi-sited, collaborative project: researching migration, working with variation Emine Fişek; 5. Ethics Natalie Alvarez and Patrick Anderson; Part II. Doing: 6. You're already a digital humanist: why aren't you thinking like one? Derek Miller; 7. Analyzing immersive performance through lived bricolage Julia M. Ritter; 8. Talking theatre in an oral culture: audience research in Ghana Awo Mana Asiedu; 9. Painful fieldwork? Radical empiricism and ritual performance in the Philippines Julius Bautista; 10. Fieldwork as method in theatre and performance studies Jonas Tinius; Part III. Interpreting: 11. Archives and embodiments Adrian Curtin, Prarthana Purkayastha and meLê yamomo; 12. Methods to research marginalized early-modern practices: Más Saber Baylar Anke Charton; 13. Taking your time: research in learning-disabled theatre Tony McCaffrey; 14. Not here for the disciplines: researching with and for the Pacific Katerina Teaiwa; 15. Complexity Ruthie Abeliovich, Leo Cabranes-Grant and Soo Ryon Yoon; Conclusion: the aesthetics of performance research: appearance, conduct, design Paul Rae; Index.

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