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Informationen zum Autor Bryce Lease is Senior Lecturer in Drama and Theatre at Royal Holloway, University of London. Klappentext After '89 takes as its subject the dynamic new range of performance practices that have been developed since the demise of communism in the flourishing theatrical landscape of Poland. The theatre has subsequently retained its historical role as the crucial space for debating and interrogating cultural and political identities. Providing access to scholarship and criticism not readily available to an English-speaking readership, this study surveys the rebirth of the theatre as a site of public intervention and social criticism since the establishment of democracy and the proliferation of theatre makers that have flaunted cultural commonplaces and begged new questions of Polish culture. The book suggests that a radical democratic pluralism is only tenable through the destabilisation of attempts to essentialise Polish national identity, focusing on the development of new theatre practices that interrogate the rise of nationalism, alternative sexual identities and forms of kinship, gender equality, contested histories of antisemitism and postcolonial encounters. A new theory of political theatre is elaborated as part of the public sphere. It is argued that the most significant change in performance practice after 1989 has been from opposition to the state to a more pluralistic practice that engages with marginalised identities purposefully left out of the rhetoric of freedom and independence. This book will appeal to academics and students in theatre and performance studies and Eastern European studies. Zusammenfassung This book provides an exceptional introduction to Polish theatre since the fall of communism! exploring how theatre goes beyond norms and nationalistic concepts to intersect with politics! feminism! queer identities! the rise in anti-Semitism! ethnicities and history. -- . Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: really existing democracy 1. The move to neoliberalism2. No more heroes3. Beyond a teatr kobiecy 4. Gay emancipation and queer counterpublics5. Rethinking Polish/Jewish relations6. Equivalencies of exclusionConclusionBibliographyIndex...