by Andrzej Wirth 348 pp. Spector Books Leipzig, 2013. Patrice Pavis[1] Le livre d’Andrzej Wirth, Flucht nach vorne (Fuite en avant. Autobiographie parlée et matériaux), se compose d’une longue interview de l’auteur par le critique berlinois Thomas Irmer et d’un
Performing Exile, Performing Self
By Yana Meerzon 350 pp. London: Palgrave Macmillan Alvina Ruprecht[1] (Canada) This minutely documented study by Yana Meerzon, an Associate Professor in the Department of theatre at the University of Ottawa, analyses the poetics of an “exilic theatre” as represented by
Politiques du spectateur: Les enjeux du théâtre politique aujourd’hui
Par Olivier Neveux 275 pp. Paris: La Découverte Recensé par Philippe Rouyer[1] (France) Cet article ne souhaite qu’une seule chose: vous encourager à lire ce livre qui a obtenu le Prix 2013 du Syndicat professionnel de la Critique. Car, rendre compte
Yevgeny Vakhtangov: A Critical Portrait
By Andrei Malaev-Babel 278 pp. London and New York: Routledge Reviewed by Nikolai Pesochinsky[1] (Russia) International readers may be surprised when I say that this new book – a critical portrait of Yevgeny Vakhtangov by the Russian-American scholar Andrey Malaev-Babel
Molière On Stage: What’s So Funny?
By Robert W. Goldsby 222 pp. New York and London: Anthem Press Reviewed by David Littlejohn[1] (USA) It’s unusual to discover a thorough and successful book on a major playwright written by a professional performer or director. For one thing, one
Refereeing the Muses: A Theater Criticism/Arts Journalism Primer
By Bob Abelman and Cheryl Kushner 271 pp. New York and Frankfurt: Peter Lang Reviewed by Don Rubin[1] (Canada) It is somewhat ironic that one of the most useful little books on the art of writing criticism and on the