贡献者

IF 0.1 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER
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His work has recently appeared in the journals <em>Modern Drama, Text &amp; Presentation</em>, and <em>Life Writing</em>, as well as in the essay collection <em>Cli-Fi and Class: Socioeconomic Justice in Contemporary American Climate Fiction</em> (University of Virginia Press, 2023).</p> <p><strong>Araceli González Crespán</strong> is Associate Professor at the University of Vigo in Spain and a member of the NETEC research group (http://netec.webs.uvigo.es./en). Her current research deals mainly with female playwrights in contemporary American theatre and addresses notions of sexuality, gender, ethnicity, and difference. Her book <em>Desafío y Convención. Imágenes de la mujer sureña en Lillian Hellman</em> (2005) analyzes the representation of female characters in Hellman's southern plays. Her most recent publications are \"The Cuban Rafter Crisis on Stage: Humanizing the Experience of Refugees in María Irene Fornés' Manual for a Desperate Crossing\" in <em>American, British and Canadian Studies</em> (2022); and \"Wonder, Refuge, Promise: Explorations and Discoveries of America in Maria Irene Fornes' Final Plays\" in <em>Latin American Theatre Review</em> (2022).</p> <p><strong>Nicholas Duddy</strong> is a doctoral candidate in English at Balliol College, University of Oxford. Supported by a John Monash Scholarship, his research explores representations of suicide in Anglophone drama after the Second World War. His writing has appeared in <em>Antipodes: A Global Journal of Australian and New Zealand Literature, Cordite Poetry Review, Meniscus, TEXT: Journal for Writing and Writing Courses</em>, and <em>The Saltbush Review</em>, among others. In 2023, he was a dissertation fellow at the University of Texas at Austin's Harry Ransom Center.</p> <p><strong>Christine Froula</strong> is Professor of English, Comparative Literary Studies, and Gender Studies at Northwestern University. Her research on modernism includes \"Orlando Lives: Virginia Woolf's <em>Orlando</em> in Global Adaptation and Performance\" (2013), \"Goldie's 'War and Peace': Marinetti Meets Aristophanes and Beethoven in Bloomsbury\" (2020), <em>Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde</em> (2005), <em>Modernism's Body: Sex, Culture, and Joyce</em> (1996), <em>To Write Paradise: Style and Error in Ezra Pound's</em> Cantos (1984), and <em>Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf</em> (coedited; 2018). Dramatic adaptations include \"The Words\" (2021), the libretto for John Austin's opera <em>Heloise and Abelard</em> (2012) and \"Emancipatory Legacies: A Séance\" (2005). Current projects include \"Make It <span>Old</span> New: Modernist Classics in 21<sup>st</sup>-Century Art and Aesthetics\" and a coedited collection of Bloomsbury plays.</p> <p><strong>Richard Gilbert</strong> is Adjunct Professor of Theater and English at Loyola University, Chicago. His research interests include theatrical violence, theories of representation, and adaptation. He is also a violence designer whose work has been seen in dozens of theatres in Chicago and around the country. He is currently working on a textbook for theatrical violence design, under contract with Routledge.</p> <p><strong>Jay Malarcher</strong> is an Associate Professor and Dramaturg at West Virginia University. A scholar of comedy, he has published extensively on all areas of comedy and is working on a book of comedy theory tentatively titled <em>The Situation of Comedy</em>. His first book, <em>The Classically American Comedy of Larry Gelbart</em>, is the definitive look at a legendary comedy writer. Jay also taught American comedy in Zagreb, Croatia, as a Fulbright Scholar during the 2009–10 academic year.</p> <p><strong>Carla J. McDonough</strong> is an Assistant Professor of English at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, specializing in Modern and Contemporary Drama. Her current scholarship melds ideas from performance art, art theory, antiracism and dramatic theory to explore ways that contemporary playwrights engage in cultural critique of racial and gendered narratives. She is the author of the book <em>Staging Masculinity: Male Identity in Contemporary American Drama</em>, and she has published articles in <em>Modern Drama, Theatre Journal</em>, and the <em>Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism</em>. Most recently, her research explores comedy and satire as a method of social justice activism in the works of various contemporary playwrights and performers.</p> <p><strong>Laura Milburn</strong> is a doctoral student at the University of Birmingham, UK. 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His work has recently appeared in the journals <em>Modern Drama, Text &amp; Presentation</em>, and <em>Life Writing</em>, as well as in the essay collection <em>Cli-Fi and Class: Socioeconomic Justice in Contemporary American Climate Fiction</em> (University of Virginia Press, 2023).</p> <p><strong>Araceli González Crespán</strong> is Associate Professor at the University of Vigo in Spain and a member of the NETEC research group (http://netec.webs.uvigo.es./en). Her current research deals mainly with female playwrights in contemporary American theatre and addresses notions of sexuality, gender, ethnicity, and difference. Her book <em>Desafío y Convención. Imágenes de la mujer sureña en Lillian Hellman</em> (2005) analyzes the representation of female characters in Hellman's southern plays. 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In 2023, he was a dissertation fellow at the University of Texas at Austin's Harry Ransom Center.</p> <p><strong>Christine Froula</strong> is Professor of English, Comparative Literary Studies, and Gender Studies at Northwestern University. Her research on modernism includes \\\"Orlando Lives: Virginia Woolf's <em>Orlando</em> in Global Adaptation and Performance\\\" (2013), \\\"Goldie's 'War and Peace': Marinetti Meets Aristophanes and Beethoven in Bloomsbury\\\" (2020), <em>Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde</em> (2005), <em>Modernism's Body: Sex, Culture, and Joyce</em> (1996), <em>To Write Paradise: Style and Error in Ezra Pound's</em> Cantos (1984), and <em>Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf</em> (coedited; 2018). Dramatic adaptations include \\\"The Words\\\" (2021), the libretto for John Austin's opera <em>Heloise and Abelard</em> (2012) and \\\"Emancipatory Legacies: A Séance\\\" (2005). Current projects include \\\"Make It <span>Old</span> New: Modernist Classics in 21<sup>st</sup>-Century Art and Aesthetics\\\" and a coedited collection of Bloomsbury plays.</p> <p><strong>Richard Gilbert</strong> is Adjunct Professor of Theater and English at Loyola University, Chicago. His research interests include theatrical violence, theories of representation, and adaptation. He is also a violence designer whose work has been seen in dozens of theatres in Chicago and around the country. He is currently working on a textbook for theatrical violence design, under contract with Routledge.</p> <p><strong>Jay Malarcher</strong> is an Associate Professor and Dramaturg at West Virginia University. A scholar of comedy, he has published extensively on all areas of comedy and is working on a book of comedy theory tentatively titled <em>The Situation of Comedy</em>. His first book, <em>The Classically American Comedy of Larry Gelbart</em>, is the definitive look at a legendary comedy writer. Jay also taught American comedy in Zagreb, Croatia, as a Fulbright Scholar during the 2009–10 academic year.</p> <p><strong>Carla J. McDonough</strong> is an Assistant Professor of English at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, specializing in Modern and Contemporary Drama. Her current scholarship melds ideas from performance art, art theory, antiracism and dramatic theory to explore ways that contemporary playwrights engage in cultural critique of racial and gendered narratives. She is the author of the book <em>Staging Masculinity: Male Identity in Contemporary American Drama</em>, and she has published articles in <em>Modern Drama, Theatre Journal</em>, and the <em>Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism</em>. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 撰稿人杰弗里-布朗(Jeffrey M. Brown)是圣约瑟夫大学英语系副教授,教授现代文学、戏剧和医学人文课程。他目前的研究探讨了戏剧如何塑造和激发对医学教育、叙事医学和生物伦理学至关重要的情感参与模式。他的作品最近发表在《现代戏剧》、《文本与演示》和《生活写作》等期刊上,并收录在论文集《Cli-Fi 与阶级》中:美国当代气候小说中的社会经济正义》(弗吉尼亚大学出版社,2023 年)。Araceli González Crespán 是西班牙维哥大学副教授,也是 NETEC 研究小组成员 (http://netec.webs.uvigo.es./en)。她目前的研究主要涉及当代美国戏剧中的女性剧作家,并探讨性、性别、种族和差异等概念。她的著作《Desafío y Convención.Desafío y Convención. Imágenes de la mujer sureña en Lillian Hellman (2005) 一书分析了赫尔曼南部戏剧中女性角色的表现形式。她最近发表的论文有:《舞台上的古巴椽子危机:玛丽亚-伊雷娜-福内斯的《绝境穿越手册》中难民经历的人性化》,发表于《美国、英国和加拿大研究》(2022 年);《奇迹、避难所、承诺:玛丽亚-伊雷娜-福内斯最后剧作中对美国的探索和发现》,发表于《拉丁美洲戏剧评论》(2022 年)。尼古拉斯-达迪(Nicholas Duddy)是牛津大学贝利奥尔学院英语专业的博士候选人。在约翰-莫纳什奖学金的资助下,他的研究探讨了第二次世界大战后英语戏剧中的自杀表现。他的文章发表在《Antipodes:A Global Journal of Australian and New Zealand Literature》、《Cordite Poetry Review》、《Meniscus》、《TEXT: Journal for Writing and Writing Courses》和《The Saltbush Review》等。2023 年,他在德克萨斯大学奥斯汀分校哈利-兰森中心担任论文研究员。克里斯蒂娜-弗劳拉是西北大学英语、比较文学研究和性别研究教授。她对现代主义的研究包括《奥兰多的生活》:弗吉尼亚-伍尔夫的《奥兰多》在全球的改编和表演"(2013 年)、"戈尔迪的《战争与和平》:Marinetti Meets Aristophanes and Beethoven in Bloomsbury"(2020 年)、Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde(2005 年)、Modernism's Body: Sex, Culture, and Joyce(1996 年)、To Write Paradise:1984 年),以及《凯瑟琳-曼斯菲尔德与弗吉尼亚-伍尔夫》(合编;2018 年)。戏剧改编作品包括《话语》(2021 年)、约翰-奥斯汀的歌剧《海洛伊丝和阿伯拉尔》的剧本(2012 年)和《解放的遗产》(2005 年):降神会》(2005 年)。目前的项目包括 "旧貌换新颜:21 世纪艺术和美学中的现代主义经典",以及与他人合编的布卢姆斯伯里戏剧集。理查德-吉尔伯特是芝加哥洛约拉大学戏剧和英语兼职教授。他的研究兴趣包括戏剧暴力、表现理论和改编。他还是一名暴力设计师,其作品曾在芝加哥和全国各地的数十家剧院上演。他目前正在编写一本戏剧暴力设计教科书,已与 Routledge 签订合同。Jay Malarcher 是西弗吉尼亚大学的副教授兼戏剧指导。作为一名喜剧学者,他发表了大量关于喜剧各个领域的文章,目前正在编写一本喜剧理论专著,书名暂定为《喜剧情境》(The Situation of Comedy)。他的第一本书《拉里-盖尔巴特的经典美式喜剧》是对这位传奇喜剧作家的权威解读。2009-10 学年,杰伊还作为富布赖特学者在克罗地亚萨格勒布教授美国喜剧。Carla J. McDonough 是田纳西州纳什维尔贝尔蒙特大学英语系助理教授,专攻现代和当代戏剧。她目前的学术研究融合了表演艺术、艺术理论、反种族主义和戏剧理论的观点,探索当代剧作家参与种族和性别叙事文化批判的方式。她著有《上演男性》一书:她曾在《现代戏剧》、《戏剧杂志》和《戏剧理论与批评杂志》上发表文章。最近,她的研究探讨了喜剧和讽刺作为社会正义行动主义的一种方法在不同的当代剧作家和表演者的作品中的应用。劳拉-米尔本是英国伯明翰大学的一名博士生。她的论文主要研究诺埃尔...
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Contributors
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

Jeffrey M. Brown is Associate Professor of English at Saint Joseph's University, where he teaches courses in modern literature, theatre, and the medical humanities. His current research considers the ways in which the theatre both models and elicits modes of affective engagement that are central to medical education, narrative medicine, and bioethics. His work has recently appeared in the journals Modern Drama, Text & Presentation, and Life Writing, as well as in the essay collection Cli-Fi and Class: Socioeconomic Justice in Contemporary American Climate Fiction (University of Virginia Press, 2023).

Araceli González Crespán is Associate Professor at the University of Vigo in Spain and a member of the NETEC research group (http://netec.webs.uvigo.es./en). Her current research deals mainly with female playwrights in contemporary American theatre and addresses notions of sexuality, gender, ethnicity, and difference. Her book Desafío y Convención. Imágenes de la mujer sureña en Lillian Hellman (2005) analyzes the representation of female characters in Hellman's southern plays. Her most recent publications are "The Cuban Rafter Crisis on Stage: Humanizing the Experience of Refugees in María Irene Fornés' Manual for a Desperate Crossing" in American, British and Canadian Studies (2022); and "Wonder, Refuge, Promise: Explorations and Discoveries of America in Maria Irene Fornes' Final Plays" in Latin American Theatre Review (2022).

Nicholas Duddy is a doctoral candidate in English at Balliol College, University of Oxford. Supported by a John Monash Scholarship, his research explores representations of suicide in Anglophone drama after the Second World War. His writing has appeared in Antipodes: A Global Journal of Australian and New Zealand Literature, Cordite Poetry Review, Meniscus, TEXT: Journal for Writing and Writing Courses, and The Saltbush Review, among others. In 2023, he was a dissertation fellow at the University of Texas at Austin's Harry Ransom Center.

Christine Froula is Professor of English, Comparative Literary Studies, and Gender Studies at Northwestern University. Her research on modernism includes "Orlando Lives: Virginia Woolf's Orlando in Global Adaptation and Performance" (2013), "Goldie's 'War and Peace': Marinetti Meets Aristophanes and Beethoven in Bloomsbury" (2020), Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Avant-Garde (2005), Modernism's Body: Sex, Culture, and Joyce (1996), To Write Paradise: Style and Error in Ezra Pound's Cantos (1984), and Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf (coedited; 2018). Dramatic adaptations include "The Words" (2021), the libretto for John Austin's opera Heloise and Abelard (2012) and "Emancipatory Legacies: A Séance" (2005). Current projects include "Make It Old New: Modernist Classics in 21st-Century Art and Aesthetics" and a coedited collection of Bloomsbury plays.

Richard Gilbert is Adjunct Professor of Theater and English at Loyola University, Chicago. His research interests include theatrical violence, theories of representation, and adaptation. He is also a violence designer whose work has been seen in dozens of theatres in Chicago and around the country. He is currently working on a textbook for theatrical violence design, under contract with Routledge.

Jay Malarcher is an Associate Professor and Dramaturg at West Virginia University. A scholar of comedy, he has published extensively on all areas of comedy and is working on a book of comedy theory tentatively titled The Situation of Comedy. His first book, The Classically American Comedy of Larry Gelbart, is the definitive look at a legendary comedy writer. Jay also taught American comedy in Zagreb, Croatia, as a Fulbright Scholar during the 2009–10 academic year.

Carla J. McDonough is an Assistant Professor of English at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, specializing in Modern and Contemporary Drama. Her current scholarship melds ideas from performance art, art theory, antiracism and dramatic theory to explore ways that contemporary playwrights engage in cultural critique of racial and gendered narratives. She is the author of the book Staging Masculinity: Male Identity in Contemporary American Drama, and she has published articles in Modern Drama, Theatre Journal, and the Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. Most recently, her research explores comedy and satire as a method of social justice activism in the works of various contemporary playwrights and performers.

Laura Milburn is a doctoral student at the University of Birmingham, UK. Her thesis focuses on Noël...

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来源期刊
COMPARATIVE DRAMA
COMPARATIVE DRAMA Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Comparative Drama (ISSN 0010-4078) is a scholarly journal devoted to studies international in spirit and interdisciplinary in scope; it is published quarterly (Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter) at Western Michigan University
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