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Article contents
For a New Political Theatre1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 July 2017
Extract
The first words of Caranguejo Overdrive, spoken by ‘a crab who one day had been a man named Cosme’, encapsulate the fundamental principles guiding the work's creation. Based on an unorthodox ingesting of Josué de Castro – the geographer who proved that hunger is not the fruit of any natural disaster, but rather of an unjust social organization – Glauber Rocha, the filmmaker who made hunger not his theme, but the very engine of his aesthetic – and Chico Science, the musician who revived the Baudelairean image of the ‘rag-picker poet’, Oswaldian anthropophagy, and tropicalism – the contemporary figure of the ‘man-crab’ emerges.
- Type
- Dossier: Snapshot: Brazil
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © International Federation for Theatre Research 2017
Footnotes
Original site of publication: Àgora Crítica Teatral, at www.agoracriticateatral.com.br/criticas/22/caranguejo-overdrive.
References
NOTES
2 Oswald de Andrade (1890–1954), modernist author of the ‘Cannibal Manifesto’ (1928). Tropicalism is a cultural movement of the late 1960s, predominantly in music and art.
3 A common form of political protest.