Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Week 7- Brothers, Sisters, Mothers, Fathers: Ntozake Shange's For Colored Girls and Lynn Nottage's Crumbs from the Table of Joy




This week we explore the black family in African American Theater, specifically focusing on the role of women and their multiple roles. As we explore the terms Negro, Colored, Black, Afro-American and African American, and their relationship to the black family, how do these terms define the limits of what roles are available to women? How are women's roles over time reflected in the ways that black people in the United States identify themselves as "black"? Shange's For Colored Girls explores the multiple roles of black women as sisters, mothers, lovers, friends. The play takes place in the 1970s as black women began to assert themselves as feminists and create their own perceptions of black female identity. In Nottage's Crumbs, we see African American women in the 1950s defining themselves both in and outside the family home in realtionship to black men and socially prescribed roles for women. Both plays address the ways that black women define themselves in relationship to dominant society and black men.
As you blog this week, link your ideas about the play to the shifting definitions of blackness reflected in the terms Negro, Colored, Black, Afro-American and African American. How does the historical time period assigned to these terms shape possibilities for black women to self-define?

Monday, February 15, 2010

Week 6- Disrupting the Black-White Binary / Adrienne Kennedy's Funnyhouse of a Negro


This week, we continue our examination of plays influenced by the avant-garde that have shaped African American Theater. As you blog on the key term for this week, racial passing, see if you can identify the ways that Kennedy disrupts and/or reinforces the hierarchies between blackness and whiteness. Some questions that may prompt you to write are:
How does the playwright suggest relationships of power between the'selves' of Negro Sarah? What examples in the play does Negro Sarah give for wanting to be white?
How is her performance of blackness shaped by her hatred for all things "black"? What themes in this play are similar to other playwrights who experiment with the avant-garde such as Baraka and Genet?

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Week 5- The Black Theater and the Avant-garde...Jean Genet's The Blacks


This week we are reading Jean Genet's The Blacks: A Clown Show. The play, written by a French playwright, became a seminal work in African American Theater because of its complex themes, avant-garde structure and searing look at complex issues of power, race and corruption.

As you blog about the idea of "performing blackness," think about what examples from the play you can use in your response that challenge your perceptions of what blackness "is" or how it can be expressed in performance. The following questions may be prompts that help you develop your entry about performing blackness this week:

How do the characters perform blackness in the play? Genet is not writing about African American experiences specifically, but black experiences of colonialism.

Are Genet's thought provoking ideas about blackness different and/or similar to those expressed by African American playwrights?

Can you tell that Genet is not a black writer?

How does the author challenge what counts as a "black" play?

Avant-garde writers depart from bourgeois theater forms in order to disrupt the status quo and incite reaction from their audiences. How can a white man from France write about experiences of blackness? Is this as an avant-garde tactic used by Genet to shock and provoke audiences?

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Week 4- The Black Arts Movement and The Dutchman


This week we are discussing the Black Arts Movement which was started by Amiri Baraka. Many of the plays produced during this time period, from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, worked to establish a new Black Aesthetic for creating art. In his play "The Dutchman," Leroi Jones (AKA Amiri Baraka) uses the theater and the characters he creates to explore many polemic issues that shape American identity at this time. As you blog this week about Inter-racial conflict,think about the following questions. In what ways does Baraka use the relationship between Clay and Lula to explore and disrupt socially constructed racial stereotypes?
How does the play address inter-racial relationships?
If you consider the platform of the Blach Arts Movement as one that stressed separatism, community involvement and the development of a new arts aesthetic that departs from Euro-American ideals, how successful is Baraka at achieving these goals? Where does he fail?You do not have to respond to all of them,but do let them guide you to think more broadly abut Civil Rights and quests for self-determination by African Americans in the 1960s.