E. Susanna Weygandt, a visiting assistant professor of Russian at Sewanee: The University of the South, is a coeditor (with Maksim Hanukai) of New Russian Drama: An Anthology. Her research has been published in the Russian Review, Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema, TDR: The Drama Review, and elsewhere.
Description
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Note on Translation and Transliteration Introduction: The Postdramatic Turn on the Russian Stage and the Nonhierarchical Organization of Signs 1 The Paradigmatic Shift from Stanislavsky's "Language of Gesture" to "Intonation as Gesture" in Anatoly Vasiliev's Theater 2 The History of Russian New Drama and Mikhail Durnenkov's Place in It 3 Speaking Up! Reporting Speech and Documenting Facts at Teatr.doc 4 Postdramatic Rap in the Theater and Cinema of Ivan Vyrypaev 5 The Sonic Inscription of Polina Agureeva Links Drama's Roots to the Vyrypaevian Post-Dramatic Conclusion: The Domain of the Sayable in Russian Theater and Public Performance Decades into New Millennial Russia Notes Index
"Explores in fascinating clarity the radical aesthetics and dissident, critical engagement of Russian New Drama." - Oksana Bulgakowa, author of Sergei Eisenstein: A Biography "Weygandt uncovers the central innovation of post-Soviet New Drama: the move from somatic to sonic modes of performance. The central argument is highly original, grounded in theory and scholarship, and persuasive. This is a transformative contribution that will have a lasting impact on our understanding of the major shifts in Russian theater over the past three decades." - Molly Thomasy Blasing, author of Snapshots of the Soul: Photo-Poetic Encounters in Modern Russian Culture "The cacophonic, vibrant, and shocking 'new drama' of social critique and dissent in Putin's Russia engages the public with powerful street talk and emotive cries, a twenty-first-century 'new technology of signs.' Weygandt's deeply researched book is a necessary read if you want to understand today's Russia." - Richard Schechner, editor of TDR: The Drama Review