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Jill Dolan
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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
TDR/The Drama Review (2014) 58 (4 (224)): 8–11.
Published: 01 December 2014
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The concept of desire has been theoretically renewed and rewritten constantly in the academy, and yet, it continues to motivate our spectatorship, our scholarship, and our criticism. This issue represents an eclectic and powerful reminder of how desire remains an optic through which we see, feel, and think about performance.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
TDR/The Drama Review (2013) 57 (4 (220)): 7–12.
Published: 01 December 2013
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
TDR/The Drama Review (2011) 55 (3 (211)): 18–20.
Published: 01 September 2011
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
TDR/The Drama Review (2009) 53 (1 (201)): 7–46.
Published: 01 March 2009
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In 2007, Routledge published Theory for Performance Studies as part of its Theory 4 series, listing Philip Auslander as author. When, in August, The Chronicle of Higher Education revealed that much of the book was lifted word-for-word from the template for the series, Theory for Religious Studies by Timothy K. Beal and William E. Deal, TDR editor Richard Schechner convened via email and phone conversations a “ TDR Forum,” asking leaders in the field to respond to the book and the series. Schechner and other respondents address issues of plagiarism, corporate takeovers of academic publishing, and the dumbing down of performance studies, asking why a notable scholar such as Auslander would undertake such an egregious piece of “scholarship.” Deal and Beal answer some questions put to them by Schechner, and Routledge's Claire L'Enfant and Talia Rodgers offer their perspectives.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
TDR/The Drama Review (2008) 52 (3 (199)): 98–117.
Published: 01 September 2008
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Playwright and performer Deb Margolin's contributions to contemporary American theatre over the course of her now 25-plus year career have been eclectic. In the 1980s and early '90s she performed with Peggy Shaw and Lois Weaver as the feminist performance troupe Split Britches, for which Margolin did much of the writing, based on the trio's improvisations and experiments. In the interstices of her work with Split Britches, Margolin built her own career as a solo performer and playwright. In her autobiographical Index to Idioms , premiered in 2005, and in conversation with Jill Dolan, Margolin addresses her process, politics, and pleasures in performance and playwrighting.