Jason B. Dorwart is assistant professor of global theatre studies at Hong Kong Baptist University.
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Description
Table of Contents Introduction Chapter One: Framing Disability, Disabling the Frame: The Permeable Aesthetic Distance of The Cripple of Inishmaan Chapter Two: Controlling Disability: Representations of the Elephant Man Chapter Three: Eliminating Disability: American Horror Story's Subtle Preference for Cripping Up Chapter Four: Reframing Disability: Live Performance and Countering the Incorporeal Corpse Chapter Five: Reviewing Disability: Public Taste at Play with Disability Studies Bibliography About the Author
"The Incorporeal Corpse is a timely intervention into current debates about disabled actors playing disabled roles. Jason Dorwart addresses the question of what difference disability makes in theater and, more specifically, what impact a disabled actor makes on audience expectations when playing a disabled character. Dorwart's sophisticated treatment of work in theater, television, and performance makes this a vital contribution to both disability and theater studies." -- Michael Davidson, University of California San Diego, author of Distressing Language: Disability and the Poetics of Error