Performing Arts
Showing 49–64 of 114 results
| Title & Subtitle | Abstract | Contributors | Pages | Year | Purchase |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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From ![]() Intertwined TalesFrom: At Home |
Chapter 5 features interviews with Sandra Semchuk, Tim Schouten, and Marian Penner Bancroft. This chapter focuses on non-Indigenous artists whose sense of home are also inextricably bound up with … | Lezli Rubin-Kunda | 16 | 2018 | $1.60 Add |
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From ![]() IntroductionFrom: Bigotry on Broadway |
Ishmael Reed | 13 | 2021 | $1.30 Add | |
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From ![]() IntroductionSetting Out From: At Home |
Lezli Rubin-Kunda | 7 | 2018 | $0.70 Add | |
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From ![]() IntroductionFrom: Crip Kinship |
Shayda Kafai | 15 | 2021 | $1.50 Add | |
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From ![]() Irving BerlinBigotry and Brilliance From: Bigotry on Broadway |
This chapter explores the complicated legacy of Irving Berlin, highlighting some bigoted and problematic views. | Jack Foley | 15 | 2021 | $1.50 Add |
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From ![]() Legal and Religious Discourse in the AntigoneFrom: Antigone v. Creon |
Examination of the conflict in the play between the discourses of religious law and human law. | Roger S. Fisher | 20 | 2014 | $2.00 Add |
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From ![]() Legal Speech and Argumentation in the AntigoneFrom: Antigone v. Creon |
Explanation of the legal connotations of the words, phrases, and metaphors used in the play. | Roger S. Fisher | 22 | 2014 | $2.20 Add |
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From ![]() Locating and Re-locatingFrom: At Home |
Chapter 1 focuses on author and artist Lezli Rubin-Kunda, who speaks on her own experiences with belonging, her art, and her sense of home as both a Canadian and Israeli. | Lezli Rubin-Kunda | 13 | 2018 | $1.30 Add |
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From ![]() Making MisterAnti-Black Misandry in Alice Walker’s Portrayal of Black Men in The Color Purple From: Bigotry on Broadway |
This chapter critiques The Colour Purple and the Mister trope, arguing that the previous debates surrounding the depiction of Black men in Alice Walker’s The Color Purple have overlooked … | Tommy J. Curry | 10 | 2021 | $1.00 Add |
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From ![]() Manifesting Our Collective FuturesFrom: Crip Kinship |
Topics discussed include the future of disability justice, rebirth and finding inspiration in a collective past, and the larger movement towards a more inclusive crip future. | Shayda Kafai | 11 | 2021 | $1.10 Add |
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From ![]() Mapping the TerritoryFrom: At Home |
Chapter 9 features interviews with Victoria Stanton, Sandra Rechico, Gwen MacGregor, Ellen Moffat, Kim Morgan, and Peter Dykhuis. This chapter focuses on finding home in oneself, where art … | Lezli Rubin-Kunda | 18 | 2018 | $1.80 Add |
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From ![]() Metaphors and Images for Justice in the AntigoneFrom: Antigone v. Creon |
Discussion of the play’s representation of law and legal culture through visual imagery and symbolism. | Roger S. Fisher | 12 | 2014 | $1.20 Add |
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From ![]() Mythical LandscapesFrom: At Home |
Chapter 3 is an interview with Amalie Atkins. This chapter focuses on how childhood landscapes can be a powerful trigger for creativity, even if one does not continue to reside there. | Lezli Rubin-Kunda | 10 | 2018 | $1.00 Add |
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From ![]() Neither Cockeyed nor an Optimist about South PacificFrom: Bigotry on Broadway |
The author explores the racist, imperialist, and sexist undertones of South Pacific. | Emil Guillermo | 9 | 2021 | $0.90 Add |
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From ![]() No Place Like HomeFrom: At Home |
Chapter 2 features interviews with Simon Frank, Nicole Fournier, and Susan Feindel. The chapter focuses on artists who live in and create art out of their childhood surroundings. | Lezli Rubin-Kunda | 21 | 2018 | $2.10 Add |
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From ![]() NotesFrom: Haircuts by Children and Other Evidence for a New Social Contract |
Notes | Darren O'Donnell | 7 | 2018 | $0.70 Add |








