Event overview
In this event, part of the May 2023 CCL Postcolonial Theatre series, Jerri Daboo discusses new forms of performance by British South Asian diaspora communities
(This event has been POSTPONED from 11 May to 1 JUNE 2023 due to unavoidable circumstances)
The development of the movement of British South Asian theatre offers a way to examine how diaspora communities create new forms of performance in response to their positioning.
Adaptation has been a particular feature of this movement, and this talk will consider why and how forms of adaptation have been used, leading to new meanings of the plays, as well as new forms of performance with a hybridity of styles.
An approach from diaspora studies will show how a postcolonialism can be extended in the context of diaspora to allow for transnational connections and movements of performance forms, leading to the use of the term transadaptation to take into account translation (verbal and cultural), transmedia, and the transnational.
The talk by Jerri Daboo will examine a number of performances produced by theatre companies Tara Arts and Tamasha, as well as by playwright Tanika Gupta.
The talk will be chaired by Nandi Bhatia.
The participants:
Jerri Daboo is Professor of Performance in the Department of Communication, Drama and Film at the University of Exeter. She has been researching the cultures and histories of British South Asian communities since 2004, including several large AHRC-funded projects, and many publications including her monograph Staging British South Asian Culture: Bollywood and Bhangra on the British Stage.
Nandi Bhatia is Associate Dean for Research for the Faculty of Arts & Humanities and Professor at Western University, Canada. A specialist in Postcolonial Literature and theory, her research explores the connections between literary and theatrical practices, nationalism and colonialism, and examines the ruptures and crossovers that resulted from the British Empire's longstanding engagement with India. Such connections have been analyzed in her monographs, Acts of Authority/Acts of Resistance: Theatre and Politics in Colonial and Postcolonial India (University of Michigan Press and Oxford University Press: 2004), Performing Women/ Performing Womanhood: Theatre, Politics and Dissent in North India (OUP, 2010), edited collections Modern Indian Theatre (ed., OUP, 2011) and Partitioned Lives: Narratives of Home, Displacement and Relocation (co-ed. with Anjali Gera-Roy, Pearson, 2009).
More information on the speakers, the event and the series
Dates & times
Date | Time | Add to calendar |
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1 Jun 2023 | 6:00pm - 7:30pm |
Accessibility
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