img Leseprobe Leseprobe

Radical Black Theatre in the New Deal

Kate Dossett

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The University of North Carolina Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

Between 1935 and 1939, the United States government paid out-of-work artists to write, act, and stage theatre as part of the Federal Theatre Project (FTP), a New Deal job relief program. In segregated "Negro Units" set up under the FTP, African American artists took on theatre work usually reserved for whites, staged black versions of "white" classics, and developed radical new dramas. In this fresh history of the FTP Negro Units, Kate Dossett examines what she calls the black performance community—a broad network of actors, dramatists, audiences, critics, and community activists—who made and remade black theatre manuscripts for the Negro Units and other theatre companies from New York to Seattle.

Tracing how African American playwrights and troupes developed these manuscripts and how they were then contested, revised, and reinterpreted, Dossett argues that these texts constitute an archive of black agency, and understanding their history allows us to consider black dramas on their own terms. The cultural and intellectual labor of black theatre artists was at the heart of radical politics in 1930s America, and their work became an important battleground in a turbulent decade.

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Schlagwörter

black Living Newspapers, radical black theatre, black heroes, black performance communities, Native Son, social realism, Universal Negro Improvement Association, Communist Party of the USA, Black theatre, Garveyism, Theodore Browne, anticommunism, Harlem theatre, black performance, Rose McClendon, Paul Green, black knowledge production, black archives, Richard Wright, black intellectual history, black theatre in Chicago, American Negro Theatre, New Deal culture, Popular Front, black theatre manuscripts, African Americans and Communism, Negro Units, Theodore Ward, Federal Theatre Project, Shirley Graham Du Bois, WPA, Seattle Repertory Theatre