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Nic Leonhardt and Christopher B. Balme (eds), Developing Theatre in the Global South: Institutions, Networks, Experts. London: UCL Press (hb £55 – 978 1 80008 576 3; pb £30 – 978 1 80008 575 6). 2024, xiii + 262 pp.

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Nic Leonhardt and Christopher B. Balme (eds), Developing Theatre in the Global South: Institutions, Networks, Experts. London: UCL Press (hb £55 – 978 1 80008 576 3; pb £30 – 978 1 80008 575 6). 2024, xiii + 262 pp.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2024

Samuel Ravengai*
Affiliation:
Department of Theatre and Performance, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
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Abstract

Type
Reviews
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the International African Institute

This edited collection was developed from papers from a research project funded by the European Research Council (ERC). One of the editors was the principal investigator. It is no accident that of the fourteen chapters in the collection, eight were either written or co-authored by the editors, Nic Leonhardt and Christopher Balme. While, no doubt, all the chapters are rich in theatre history, the volume reads more as a work about the editors’ contribution to global South theatre rather than a more objective analysis of a range of contributions from multiple perspectives.

The fact that the collection was funded by the ERC is an indicator that the volume is not value free. Indeed, each of the three parts of the collection historicizes the role played by international organizations and aid agencies in promoting theatre in the global South. However, it was a promotion with a caveat: advancing Eurocentric theatre in spaces that had different conceptions of theatre. While in some countries, such as those in Asia and the Arab world, this Eurocentrism was embraced, in others, some of which are in Africa, the agenda of decolonization did not quite agree with the ideals of the funders and it created theatre that reflected local conditions. The collection, therefore, makes an argument that international organizations and aid agencies paradoxically promoted both neocolonialism and decolonization. What is clear in the collection is the glorification of international aid agencies and the immortalization of their history in shaping theatre and discourse in the global South. While this collection may be soothing to Western funders, showing them as being successful in displaying the soft power of Europe and the USA to thwart Soviet Union influence during the post-World War Two period, it may be an irritant to postcolonial government officials. With the benefit of hindsight, the findings in this collection reveal that the funding of theatre was not an innocent act of philanthropy; rather, it was designed to advance the foreign policy of Western powers.

This volume is made up of three parts, each touching on a specific niche in the role of global capital. Part 1 has four chapters focusing on the theme of ‘(Un)sustainable institutions: building a theatrical epistemic community’. The opening chapter by Viviana Iacob and Rebecca Sturm sets the stage for understanding the globalization agenda through historicizing the formation and role of the International Theatre Institute (ITI) and the International Union for Puppetry Arts (UNIMA). These assisted in the circulation of expertise and practices that favoured Eurocentric methods even after some global South countries gained independence. Chapter 2, by Gideon Morison and Judith Rottenburg, turns the gaze on Africa and captures the festivals hosted by African countries that had gained independence. While, at first, these festivals were bankrolled by African governments, the demands of the Bretton Woods institutions – the World Bank and International Monetary Fund – to cut social spending as a precondition for getting lines of credit deprived African theatre of the necessary support. This vacuum was then occupied by international aid agencies and NGOs, which turned theatre into a message machine while emasculating its development on African terms. Chapter 3, by Abdul Karim Hakib, puts Zimbabwe centre stage as a space where the term ‘theatre for development’ gained global currency after the Murewa workshop. The role of ITI and UNESCO in funding the workshop is valorized by the author to advance the goals of the research project. The festivals mentioned in Chapter 2 and the workshops invariably allowed the circulation of techniques between African countries, which contributed to an African aesthetic that I have called elsewhere Afroscenology.Footnote 1 While Africans had space to craft their own aesthetic, even in the face of global capital, the story is messy in Palestine. Rashna Darius Nicholson in Chapter 4 asserts that global capital prevented Palestinian theatre from engaging with the politics of Israeli occupation. The focus was on human rights and at times attacking Islamic culture for its grip on the freedoms of women.

Part 2 delves into the theme of technopolitics and has a collection of four chapters. Technopolitics is the development of technology for political purposes. In Chapter 5, Balme focuses on national theatres in Africa, with Uganda as a case study. The same issues that decimated support for African festivals also affected government support to national theatres, allowing neoliberal support to replace government finance. While Westernization of theatre happened through aid money in some contexts, Ziad Adwan in Chapter 6 advances the argument that the Syrian dictatorship preferred Western theatre in the academies it funded as it offered little room for critiquing its excesses. The history of the Higher Institute of Dramatic Arts in Syria evidenced that. The same argument is raised in Chapter 8 by Gustavo Guenzburger and Bernado Fonseca Machado about the genre of musical theatre in Brazil. Probably owing to the relatively higher number of white people of Portuguese descent, this Westernization of musical theatre was made possible.

Part 3, with six chapters, focuses on expert networks and narrows its focus to individuals who advanced specific goals and/or practices. We learn of the activities of Severino Montano through the agency of Leonhardt in Chapter 9. He was headhunted by the Rockefeller Foundation, trained, and deployed in his home country of the Philippines to advance theatre training programmes. Leonhardt does not highlight the specificities of theatre that emerged from this funding. Hasibe Kalkan in Chapter 10 is very specific on the outcomes of the work of Metin And in Turkey. The goal was to draw Turkey to the Western world through NATO membership and Westernization of its culture and to delink it from the old Islamic Ottoman Empire culture. Through theatre training, research and documentation funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, both goals were achieved. In Chapter 11, Clara de Andrade and Christopher Balme historicize the contribution of Augusto Boal in theorizing the theatre of the oppressed through the Centre for the Theatre of the Oppressed, funded by the Ford Foundation. The goal here was not to expand Eurocentrism but to be associated with a renowned theatre practitioner and theoretician who could be used to counter the argument that international funders are more interested in advancing Western culture and human rights. In this case, the aesthetic was at a tangent with Western practice. Sturm, in Chapter 12, draws our attention to Cecile Guidote, who founded the Philippine Educational Theatre Association with the support of ITI, UNESCO and the Rockefeller Foundation. In Chapter 13, Balme historicizes the contribution of Robert W. July to the funding of theatre in African universities. He travelled broadly, headhunting talent and upskilling handpicked individuals such as Wole Soyinka. Hakib follows the activities of Robert W. July in Ghana and the support his organization gave to Efua Sutherland at the University of Ghana and the Ghana Drama Studio. Despite this funding, Sutherland did not compromise on crafting a Ghanaian aesthetic based on African storytelling, which she called Anansegoro.

The volume covers what it calls ‘theatre in the global South’. The global South is such a vast geographical expanse that fourteen chapters obviously will not cover it exhaustively. I would imagine that the goal was not to cover every space suggested by the epithet, but to record the activities of international organizations and aid agencies in a sample of countries. To that end, the volume succeeds, but it fails to satisfy the geographical space suggested by the title.

References

1 S. Ravengai (2024) Decolonising African Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.