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ARTS 649
Performing Latin America(s): Politics, Culture, and Society Onstage
Claudia Nascimento
| Course Objectives |
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As Colombian writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez remarked in
his Nobel Prize acceptance lecture, Latin America’s violent history includes
colonization and seventeen military coups. For economic and political
reasons, many of its citizens have immigrated or left for exile. The main
goal of this course is to examine how Latin American and Latino artists tell
the continent’s history via performance. In that, we will look at the
intersection between individual experience and larger socio-political
contexts in the works of artists from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Cuba,
Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, as well as those living in the United
States and Europe. Though the focus of the course is theatre, at times we
will also draw from other art forms. |
| Course Readings |
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Play anthologies:
-Three Plays by Griselda Gambarro. Northwestern
University Press, 1992.
-Latin American Theatre in Translation. Xlibris Corporation, 2000.
-Colombian Theatre in the Vortex. Bucknell University Press, 2004.
-The Methuen Book of Contemporary Latin American Plays. Methuen, 2004.
- The Theatre of Nelson Rodrigues. FUNARTE (Brazil), 2001.
(Articles, reviews, and other readings will be
available online in Blackboard/Course Documents) |
| Course Schedule |
| WEEK 1 |
Military Coups and Latin American Political Theatre.
Plays
Argentina:
-Gambaro, Griselda. “Information to Foreigners.”
A drama of disappearance, an experimental work dealing with the theme of
random and meaningless punishment in which the audience is led through
darkened passageways to a series of nightmarish tableaux.
Chile:
-de la Parra, Marco Antonio (Chile). “The Small History
of Chile.”
Four teachers and a principal of a high school attempt to give classes in a
classroom where “neither the materials nor content exist to teach; there are
no maps or flag, there’s no history, there is forgetting, therefore there is
no country.” Not only do the necessary utensils not exist in the school,
but one of the teachers states that “the history of Chile has become lost.”
Additional readings
Argentina:
-Taylor, Diana. “Theater and Terrorism: Griselda
Gambaro’s ‘Information for Foreigners’.” Theatre Journal, 42: 2 (May, 1990).
165-182. |
| WEEK 2 |
Performance and Censorship
Plays
T.B.A.
Additional readings
Brazil:
-George, David. Flash and Crash Days: Brazilian Theatre
in the Post-Dictatorship Period. Excerpts.
Argentina:
-Graham-Jones, Jean. “Broken Pencils and Crouching
Dictators: Issues of Censorship in Contemporary Argentine Theatre.” Theatre
Journal 53, no. 4 (2001): 595-605. |
| WEEK 3 |
Protest and Activism
Play
Colombia:
Lucky Strike. Teatro de la Candelaria.
With the collective creation Lucky Strike Teatro de la
Candelaria confronted their audiences with Colombia’s new identity as a
major player in the international drug trade.
Additional readings
United States:
-Broyles-González, Yolanda. El Teatro Campesino:
Theatre in the Chicano Movement. University of Texas Press, 1994. Excerpts.
Luiz Valdez’s El Teatro Campesino (United States,
California) was the cultural wing of the United Farm Workers union, a
popular theater that took its material directly from the lives of its
audience in the bean fields of California’s central valley. With a pointed
political mission, the theater, and its driving force Luis Valdez, went from
agitprop to Broadway.
Brazil:
-Boal, Augusto. Theatre of the Oppressed. Theatre
Communications Group: New York, 1985. Excerpts.
Brazilian artist and activist Augusto Boal’s book challenges the very
premise of Western theater, starting with Aristotle and the first
dramatists, and explores what social constructs lie behind the traditional
theater form. Central to Boal’s thesis is an attempt to bring spectators
into an active role with the drama, encouraging them to comment on the
social situations they see presented and suggest potentials for change.
Argentina:
Taylor, Diana. “Making a Spectacle: The Mothers of
Plaza De Mayo.” In Radical Street Theatre. Editor Jan Cohen-Cruz. London:
Routledge, 1998. |
| WEEK 4 |
The Family in Performance
Play
Venezuela:
-Santana, Rodolfo. Never Loose Your Head Over a Swedish
Doll.
Haunted by their dead mother’s photographs, two brothers engage in fierce
dispute over a Swedish doll.
Additional readings
T.B.A. |
| WEEK 5 |
Race and performance: Latin American and Latino
artists
Plays
Cuba:
-Triana, Jose. Medea in the Mirror.
The play is a re-setting of the Medea story in the Cuban revolution of 1959.
As Maria, a young mulatto takes her revenge on Julian for abandoning her for
someone else, mirroring the events that took place when Castro ousted the
Batista regime.
Brazil:
-Rodrigues, Nelson. Black Angel.
The play uses the frame of Greek tragedies to expose the characters’ dealing
with interracial marriage and internalized racism.
Additional readings
-Lane, Jill. “Keywords in Latin American Performance.”
Theatre Journal: 56. 3 (October 2004) 456-9.
-Graham, Robert. The Idea of Race in Latin America,
1870-1940. University of Texas Press, 1990. Excerpts. |
| WEEK 6 |
Class in Performance
Plays
Puerto Rico:
-Ramos-Perea, Roberto. Bad Blood: the new immigration.
Colombia:
-Reyes, Carlos Jose. Soldiers. In Colombian Theatre in
the Vortex. The banana region of Colombia has one of the bloodiest histories
of labor relations in the world and remains a terrifying place for peasants
and workers. The play refers us to a crucial event in Colombian labor and
social history and in the development of the nation’s armed forces and
labor unions, the great strike of 1928. |
| WEEK 7 |
Women and Performance: feminism and gender
Plays
Mexico:
-Vilalta, Maruxa. A Woman, Two Men, and a Gunshot. In
Women Writing Women: an anthology of Spanish American Theatre of the 1980’s.
SUNY Press, 1997.
Peru:
-Vargas Llosa, Mario. “La Chunga.” The Methuen Book of
Latin American Plays A Gambler recalls the day he traded his girlfriend to
pay a debt.
Film excerpts
Portillo, Lourdes. Señorita extraviada (2001).
Documentary about the femicide in Juarez, Mexico.
Additional readings
T.B.A. |
| WEEK 8 |
Latinos in Exile—consequences of the military coups in
South America
Play
Cuba:
Triana, Jose. Night of the Assassins.
In this parallel between Greek tragedy and 1950s Cuba, Triana nimbly walks
the tightrope between the narrow, familiar motivations that incite parricide
and the broader strangulation of human impulses that ignites defiant
politics.
Film excerpt
-Tangos: The Exile of Gardel (1986)
Additional readings
Cuba:
-Van Gelder, Lawrence. “A Metaphor of Parricide Tells
of Cuban Repression.” New York Times. June 17, 2000. |
| WEEK 9 |
Queerness:
Plays
Argentina:
Puig, Manuel. Kiss of the Spiderwoman.
A political prisoner and a gay man share a cell.
United States:
Moraga, Cherríe. The Hungry Woman: A Mexican Medea.
An apocalyptic play written at the end of the millennium, Moraga uses
mythology and an intimate realism to describe the embattled position of
Chicanos and Chicanas, not only in the United States but in relation to each
other. Drawing from the Greek Medea and the Mexican myth of La Llorona, she
portrays a woman gone mad between her longing for another woman and for the
Indian nation which is denied her.
Film excerpts:
Kiss of the Spiderwoman (1985)
Performance Slides
Brazil:
-The Book of Job, by Teatro da Vertigem
Additional texts
Brazil:
Albuquerque, Severino. Tentative Transgressions:
Homosexuality, AIDS, and Theatre in Brazil. University of Wisconsin Press,
1994. Excerpts. |
| WEEK 10 |
Latino Theatre and Border Performance
Play
United States:
Nilo Cruz, Anna in the Tropics. Dramatist’s Play
Service, 2004.
The winner of the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Anna in the Tropics is a
poignant and poetic new play from Nilo Cruz set in 1929 in a Cuban-American
cigar factory where cigars are still rolled by hand and “lectors” are
employed to educate and entertain the workers. The arrival of a new lector
is a cause for celebration, but when he begins to read aloud from Anna
Karenina, he unwittingly becomes a catalyst in the lives of his avid
listeners, for whom Tolstoy, the tropics, and the American dream prove a
volatile combination.
Film excerpts
United States/Mexico:
The Couple in the Cage: A Guatinaui Odyssey, with
Guillermo Gómez-Peña and Coco Fusco.
Additional readings
Nedelsky, Jennifer. “Law, Boundaries, and the Bounded
Self.” Law and the Order of Culture, Robert Post, ed. |
| WEEK 11 |
The Post-Dictatorship Generation in Brazil: Teatro da
Vertigem, Cia. Dos Atores.
Performance excerpts
Rehearsal: Hamlet, by Cia. dos Atores.
An adaptation of Shakespeare’s play to the
post-dictatorship context.
Play excerpts
Apocalypse 1,11, by Teatro da Vertigem
A comparison between the experiences of political
prisoners and the massacre at São Paulo’s penitentiary.
Film excerpts
Carandiru (2003)
Film about the massacre at São Paulo’s
penitentiary.
Additional reading
-Tatinge Nascimento, Cláudia. “Teatro da Vertigem: Fall
as Creation” TheatreForum 24 (2004): 35-44. |
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