Donatella Galella, Masi Asare, Jordan Ealey, Saj, H. Kim, Matthew D. Morrison, Fred Moten, Karen Shimakawa, C. Shimizu
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引用次数: 0
摘要
在2021年高等教育戏剧协会会议上举行的圆桌会议上,与会者讨论了音乐剧研究中引用的种族化政治。一些演讲者提出了对他们的工作有重大影响的反种族主义学术作品:SAJ考虑了道格拉斯·琼斯的章节“奴隶制,表演和非裔美国剧院的设计”,乔丹·埃利分享了马修·d·莫里森的文章“从属之声”中的经验教训:Masi Asare扩展了Fred Moten的文章“Taste, dissonance, flavor, escape”来思考清扫和偷窃,Donatella Galella将Karen Shimakawa的书“National Abjection: The Asian American Body舞台上的亚裔美国人”应用于当代黄脸,Hye Won Kim谈到Celine Parreñas Shimizu的书“The Hypersexuality of Race”的影响:在银幕和舞台上表演亚裔/美国女性。Morrison、Moten、Shimakawa和Shimizu反思他们为什么要写这些学术论文,以及多年后他们是如何理解他们的研究的。最后,共同作者谈到了为什么从事音乐剧研究的学者很少引用黑人和亚裔美国人表演研究等领域的研究,并想象了超越种族主义引用框架的激进可能性。
MT/D, or change: An anti-racist musical theatre reading group
In this roundtable held at the Association for Theatre in Higher Education conference in 2021, the participants discussed the racialized politics of citation in musical theatre studies. Some of the speakers lifted up anti-racist scholarly pieces that have significantly shaped their work: SAJ considered Douglas Jones Jr’s chapter ‘Slavery, performance, and the design of African American theatre’, Jordan Ealey shared lessons from Matthew D. Morrison’s article ‘The sound(s) of subjection: Constructing American popular music and racial identity through Blacksound’, Masi Asare expanded upon Fred Moten’s essay ‘Taste, dissonance, flavor, escape’ to think through sweeping away and stealing away, Donatella Galella applied Karen Shimakawa’s book National Abjection: The Asian American Body Onstage to contemporary yellowface, and Hye Won Kim talked about the influence of Celine Parreñas Shimizu’s book The Hypersexuality of Race: Performing Asian/American Women on Screen and Scene on her own work. Morrison, Moten, Shimakawa and Shimizu reflected on why they wrote those pieces of scholarship and how they understand their research years later. Finally, the co-authors spoke to reasons why scholars situated in musical theatre studies have so rarely cited research in fields like Black and Asian American performance studies and imagined radical possibilities beyond a racist citation framework.