TH3171: Western Theatre & Performance Historiography: Part I

3 Credits

What does it mean to represent? By focusing on a critical examination of this and similar questions, this course will investigate how performance events from the Ancient Greece to the French Revolution are brought to our attention, how they are made worthy of notice, and how they are rationalized as significant for theatre and performance history. By studying the theories of the Western origins of theatre and drama, the censoring of creative activities in the Ancient Rome or in the Renaissance England, the appearance of female actors and playwrights in Restoration, and the fashioning of a new economic type the eighteenth century, this course will ask: what are the consequences today of using or promoting these and not other representational practices?

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All Instructors

B+ Average (3.283)Most Common: A (39%)

This total also includes data from semesters with unknown instructors.

411 students
SNWFDCBA
  • 3.66

    /5

    Recommend
  • 3.54

    /5

    Effort
  • 4.25

    /5

    Understanding
  • 3.84

    /5

    Interesting
  • 3.57

    /5

    Activities


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