Women's Comedic Art as Social Revolution: Five Performers and the Lessons of Their Subversive Humor

Women's Comedic Art as Social Revolution: Five Performers and the Lessons of Their Subversive Humor

by Domnica Radulescu
Women's Comedic Art as Social Revolution: Five Performers and the Lessons of Their Subversive Humor

Women's Comedic Art as Social Revolution: Five Performers and the Lessons of Their Subversive Humor

by Domnica Radulescu

Paperback

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Overview

Though comic women have existed since the days of Baubo, the mythic figure of sexual humor, they have been neglected by scholars and critics. This pioneering volume tells the stories of five women who have created revolutionary forms of comic performance and discourse that defy prejudice. The artists include 16th-century performer Isabella Andreini, 17th-century improviser Caterina Biancolelli, 20th-century Italian playwright Franca Rame, and contemporary performance artists Deb Margolin and Kimberly Dark. All create humor that subverts patriarchal attitudes, conventional gender roles, and stereotypical images. The book ends with a practical guide for performers and teachers of theater.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780786460724
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 12/26/2011
Pages: 267
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

About The Author
Domnica Radulescu is a distinguished professor of Romance languages at Washington and Lee University. She has authored, edited, or coedited nine scholarly books and collections of essays. Two of her plays have received recognition from the Jane Chambers Playwriting award and she is the author of two best-selling novels, with a third novel soon to be released. She is the founding director of the National Symposium of Theater in Academe.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments     
Preface     
Introduction     

1. Isabella’s “Tricks”: Carnival and Mimicry in Sixteenth Century Italy     
2. Caterina Biancolelli: Seventeenth Century Trickster and Parisian Coquette     
3. Franca Rame: Militant Isabella, Feminist Colombina in Twentieth Century Italy     
4. Contemporary American Colombinas: The Personal, the Public, the Political, the Intimate, and the Comical     
5. The Heritage of the Commedia dell’Arte for Today’s Feminist Theaters, Comedy and Activism, and Radical Acts by Women Artists     

Chapter Notes     
Bibliography     
Index     
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