Socialist ensembles : theater and state in Cuba and Nicaragua

Author(s)

    • Martin, Randy

Bibliographic Information

Socialist ensembles : theater and state in Cuba and Nicaragua

Randy Martin

(Cultural politics, v. 8)

University of Minnesota Press, c1994

  • : pbk. : alk. paper

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 239-255) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780816624805

Description

Most discussions of socialist development within nation-states focus exclusively on the state, leaving civil society out of the picture. By looking into the realm of theatre in two socialist states, Randy Martin finds a way of broadening this view. An ethnography of theatre and political culture in Cuba and Nicaragua, his work reveals the tensions and negotiations among different dimensions of society that characterize the socialist project. Theatre, Martin shows us, is a particularly elastic expression of aesthetic and organizational form that can prefigure broader social developments. The critical sensibility displayed there, taking its cues from cultural processes beyond the stage, is indicative of the ongoing reformation of the socialist project. Martin considers Nicaragua through the Sandanista and Chamorro administrations, and Cuba from the time of reform, known as rectification through the withdrawal of Soviet aid.

Table of Contents

  • Theatre and the ethnography of socialism
  • where's the theatre?
  • Nicaraguan theatre goes to market
  • masquerades of gender in a Nicaraguan theatre
  • sources of socialist culture in Cuba
  • Cuban theatre under rectification
  • conclusion - theatre and recognition of socialism.
Volume

: pbk. : alk. paper ISBN 9780816624829

Description

Most discussions of socialist development within nation-states focus exclusively on the state, leaving civil society out of the picture. By looking into the realm of theatre in two socialist states, Randy Martin finds a way of broadening this view. An ethnography of theatre and political culture in Cuba and Nicaragua, his work reveals the tensions and negotiations among different dimensions of society that characterize the socialist project. Theatre, Martin shows us, is a particularly elastic expression of aesthetic and organizational form that can prefigure broader social developments. The critical sensibility displayed there, taking its cues from cultural processes beyond the stage, is indicative of the ongoing reformation of the socialist project. Martin considers Nicaragua through the Sandanista and Chamorro administrations, and Cuba from the time of reform know as rectification through the withdrawal of Soviet aid. Randy Martin is the author of "Performance as Political Act: the Embodied Self" (1990) and "Critical Moves: Dance Studies in Theory and Politics" (1994).

Table of Contents

  • Theatre and the ethnography of socialism
  • where's the theater?
  • Nicaraguan theatre goes to market
  • masquerades of gender in a Nicaraguan theatre
  • sources of socialist culture in Cuba
  • Cuban theatre under rectification
  • theater and recognition of socialism.

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