Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Obituaries
- Dedication
- Introduction
- Performing Black Canadas
- The Theory of Ase
- African Presence in Cuban Theatre
- Marginality, Sacrifice & Transgression
- Interculture on Stage
- Black British Theatre in London 1972–89
- Talking about Something Dark
- Jews, Blood & Ethiopian Dance in Israel
- Nature in Migration & the ‘Natural Migrant’
- Playscript
- Book Reviews
- Index
Performing Black Canadas
The Trans-American Imaginary of Black Canadian Theatre
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Obituaries
- Dedication
- Introduction
- Performing Black Canadas
- The Theory of Ase
- African Presence in Cuban Theatre
- Marginality, Sacrifice & Transgression
- Interculture on Stage
- Black British Theatre in London 1972–89
- Talking about Something Dark
- Jews, Blood & Ethiopian Dance in Israel
- Nature in Migration & the ‘Natural Migrant’
- Playscript
- Book Reviews
- Index
Summary
Rinaldo Walcott argues that ‘Black Canadian theatre is forged and performed within the context of a diasporic sensibility or consciousness’ (Walcott 2005: 80). Certainly, if one understands diaspora in the terms that Stuart Hall has proposed, ‘a necessary heterogeneity and diversity … a conception of “identity” which lives with and through, not despite, difference’ (Hall 1994: 402), diaspora offers a useful way of conceptualizing not only black Canadian theatrical production, but black Canadian artistry in general. Whether the plays attend to specific experiences of blacks in Canada – as do, for instance, George Elliott Clarke's Beatrice Chancy, Lorena Gale's Angélique, Djanet Sears' Adventures of a Black Girl in Search of God, or George Boyd's Consecrated Ground – or whether they offer a more explicit engagement with the links between black Canadians and blacks elsewhere in the diaspora – as in such plays as ahdri zhina mandiela's dark diaspora … in dub, Debbie Young and naila belvett's yagayah: two.womyn.black.griots, or Andrew Moodie's Riot – attention to lives lived ‘with and through … difference’ is in evidence. Even as the heterogeneity of black Canadian theatre invites this sort of approach to diaspora, however, the capaciousness of Hall's definition poses some difficulty for attending to the particularities of ‘black Canadas’. As both Walcott and Diana Brydon have argued, black Canadas offer ways of rethinking both conventional narratives of nation and conceptions of diaspora (Walcott 2003: 35, 40; Brydon 2001: 31).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- African Theatre 8: Diasporas , pp. 1 - 14Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009